What is the place of social and economic guarantees in a democratic constitutional order? Do such guarantees place a special strain on the judiciary? Do they help poor people? What is the relationship between such guarantees and doctrines involving state action and the horizontal application of constitutional norms? Mark Tushnet does not attempt to answer these questions directly. But he casts new light on them by analyzing a number of cases in which courts have, or have not, taken their constitutions to alter background rules of property, contract, and tort. Tushnet contends that the rise of the activist state, understood as some form of social democracy, unsettles preexisting understandings of the relationship between constitutional norms...
In this paper I will not develop the case for constitutionally protected welfare rights - I have tri...
In the American legal order, constitutional rights are conventionally understood to apply to and res...
This Article revisits the state action doctrine, a judicial invention that shields “private” or “non...
What is the place of social and economic guarantees in a democratic constitutional order? Do such gu...
Consider the following cases: (1) A man employed by a private college informs his employer (in respo...
Why does the American Constitution lack contain social and economic guarantees, which appear in most...
Deriding the state action doctrine is one of the great pastimes of American constitutional law. It h...
The international human rights revolution in the decades after the Second World War recognized econo...
On conventional accounts, the state action doctrine is dichotomous. When the government acts, consti...
The Canadian courts have held that the state cannot enter the world of discrimination or collective ...
I construct Professor Tushnet\u27s article as offering an account of societies on a legal continuum....
I have just a few comments. The first comment is a contribution to the \u27\u27analytic question po...
As constitutional protection of human rights expands around the world, the question of whether const...
The state action doctrine is a mess. Explanations for why federal courts sometimes treat the private...
As constitutional protection of human rights expands around the world, the question of whether const...
In this paper I will not develop the case for constitutionally protected welfare rights - I have tri...
In the American legal order, constitutional rights are conventionally understood to apply to and res...
This Article revisits the state action doctrine, a judicial invention that shields “private” or “non...
What is the place of social and economic guarantees in a democratic constitutional order? Do such gu...
Consider the following cases: (1) A man employed by a private college informs his employer (in respo...
Why does the American Constitution lack contain social and economic guarantees, which appear in most...
Deriding the state action doctrine is one of the great pastimes of American constitutional law. It h...
The international human rights revolution in the decades after the Second World War recognized econo...
On conventional accounts, the state action doctrine is dichotomous. When the government acts, consti...
The Canadian courts have held that the state cannot enter the world of discrimination or collective ...
I construct Professor Tushnet\u27s article as offering an account of societies on a legal continuum....
I have just a few comments. The first comment is a contribution to the \u27\u27analytic question po...
As constitutional protection of human rights expands around the world, the question of whether const...
The state action doctrine is a mess. Explanations for why federal courts sometimes treat the private...
As constitutional protection of human rights expands around the world, the question of whether const...
In this paper I will not develop the case for constitutionally protected welfare rights - I have tri...
In the American legal order, constitutional rights are conventionally understood to apply to and res...
This Article revisits the state action doctrine, a judicial invention that shields “private” or “non...