This Article calls for the overruling of the central rule in Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh (1907) on Erie grounds. Hunter announced as a matter of federal law that local governments are powerless instrumentalities of state governments. Legal scholars have criticized Hunter for exacerbating the doctrinal and practical problems that plague local government law. This Article goes further by challenging Hunter directly. It argues first that Erie v. Tompkins (1938), properly read, effectively overruled the central rule in Hunter. Second, it argues that we should not mourn the loss of that rule because its analytic support structures are historically, doctrinally, and logically defective. The Article then narrows its focus to a doctrine derived fr...
This Article considers the application of the Supreme Court\u27s state-action theory to residential ...
Article IX of New York State’s constitution establishes the basic constitutional framework for addre...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This Article calls for the overruling of the central rule in Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh (1907) on ...
The Constitution protects people, private corporations, states, and even branches of the federal gov...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Monroe v. Pape excluding municipalities as proper defendants in a...
Conventional wisdom holds that a municipal corporation receives no protection from the equal protect...
The constitutional rationale of Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins has remained elusive for almost sevent...
In an article contributed to this journal some time since, the writer, after reviewing the subject s...
Since the nineteenth century, most states have had constitutional clauses prohibiting “special laws....
This Article explains and defends the National League of Cities’ Principles of Home Rule for the 21s...
This Article examines the conflict between preserving local autonomy and remedying constitutional vi...
This Article argues that the Erie doctrine should be normalized by bringing it into line with ordina...
In this short reply to the article by Thomas Wood, Professors Amar and Caminker argue that Mr. Wood ...
This article considers whether an obligation should be placed upon the State to enforce its own laws...
This Article considers the application of the Supreme Court\u27s state-action theory to residential ...
Article IX of New York State’s constitution establishes the basic constitutional framework for addre...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This Article calls for the overruling of the central rule in Hunter v. City of Pittsburgh (1907) on ...
The Constitution protects people, private corporations, states, and even branches of the federal gov...
The Supreme Court\u27s decision in Monroe v. Pape excluding municipalities as proper defendants in a...
Conventional wisdom holds that a municipal corporation receives no protection from the equal protect...
The constitutional rationale of Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins has remained elusive for almost sevent...
In an article contributed to this journal some time since, the writer, after reviewing the subject s...
Since the nineteenth century, most states have had constitutional clauses prohibiting “special laws....
This Article explains and defends the National League of Cities’ Principles of Home Rule for the 21s...
This Article examines the conflict between preserving local autonomy and remedying constitutional vi...
This Article argues that the Erie doctrine should be normalized by bringing it into line with ordina...
In this short reply to the article by Thomas Wood, Professors Amar and Caminker argue that Mr. Wood ...
This article considers whether an obligation should be placed upon the State to enforce its own laws...
This Article considers the application of the Supreme Court\u27s state-action theory to residential ...
Article IX of New York State’s constitution establishes the basic constitutional framework for addre...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...