INFERRED, OR AT THE MOST rebuttably presumed, is a slight acquaintanceship on the part of the reader with the work on jural opposites and jural correlatives by Professor W. Newcomb Hohfeld. The Founding Fathers, as though anticipating the coming of the Messianic logician, used all of the four Hohfeldian gravamen terms-rights, privileges, powers and immunities-in the Constitution of the United States,\u27 and for this reason the author perceives a nexus between Hohfeldian logic and constitutional construction. The appropriate initial touchstone for contemporary use of this theory could appear to be the 1968 case of Flast v. Cohen, considering Mr. Justice Harlan\u27s allusions to Hohfeld in his dissenting opinion
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld is one of the great unsung heroes of twentieth century legal theory. His epon...
The author provides a review of Laurence H. Tribe & Michael C. Dorf, On Reading the Constitution, Ha...
This essay is a chapter to be included in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook on the U.S. Constitution. ...
One case in American legal history, perhaps more than any other, starkly presents in a single packag...
Wesley Hohfeld was an important legal theorist from the early 20th century. His article, Some Funda...
Skepticism among American scholars about the value of analytic legal positivism stems in part from t...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld was an American jurist who published a series of articles between 1909 and 19...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld’s 1913 article, Fundamental Legal Conceptions as Applied in Judicial Reasonin...
Judge Richard Posner’s well-known view is that constitutional theory is useless. And Judge J. Harvie...
This Article begins by reviewing Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld\u27s “fundamental conceptions” and expanding...
Judge Richard Posner\u27s well-known view is that constitutional theory is useless. And Judge J Harv...
In a number of articles published in several law magazines Albert Kocourek has taken occasion to con...
American constitutional theory has been cyclical, understanding the Constitution sometimes as a prod...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld, born in 1879, died prematurely in 1918. He left only a few law journal artic...
The eight jural relations defined by Wesley Hohfeld unite the many legal relationships that exist in...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld is one of the great unsung heroes of twentieth century legal theory. His epon...
The author provides a review of Laurence H. Tribe & Michael C. Dorf, On Reading the Constitution, Ha...
This essay is a chapter to be included in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook on the U.S. Constitution. ...
One case in American legal history, perhaps more than any other, starkly presents in a single packag...
Wesley Hohfeld was an important legal theorist from the early 20th century. His article, Some Funda...
Skepticism among American scholars about the value of analytic legal positivism stems in part from t...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld was an American jurist who published a series of articles between 1909 and 19...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld’s 1913 article, Fundamental Legal Conceptions as Applied in Judicial Reasonin...
Judge Richard Posner’s well-known view is that constitutional theory is useless. And Judge J. Harvie...
This Article begins by reviewing Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld\u27s “fundamental conceptions” and expanding...
Judge Richard Posner\u27s well-known view is that constitutional theory is useless. And Judge J Harv...
In a number of articles published in several law magazines Albert Kocourek has taken occasion to con...
American constitutional theory has been cyclical, understanding the Constitution sometimes as a prod...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld, born in 1879, died prematurely in 1918. He left only a few law journal artic...
The eight jural relations defined by Wesley Hohfeld unite the many legal relationships that exist in...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld is one of the great unsung heroes of twentieth century legal theory. His epon...
The author provides a review of Laurence H. Tribe & Michael C. Dorf, On Reading the Constitution, Ha...
This essay is a chapter to be included in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook on the U.S. Constitution. ...