Courts interpret statutes in hard cases. Statutes are frequently ambiguous, and an enacting legislature cannot foresee all future applications of a statute. The Supreme Court in these cases often chooses statutory interpretations that privilege the values that it has emphasized in its recent constitutional jurisprudence. In doing so, the Court rejects alternative interpretations that are more consistent with the values embodied in more recently enacted statutes. This is constitutional mainstreaming—an interpretive practice that molds statutes toward the Court\u27s own preferred values and away from values favored by legislative majorities. In addition to providing a novel descriptive framework for what the Court is doing in these hard cases...
Fidelity to ‘democracy’ is frequently assumed to be an important evaluative criterion for selecting ...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
Courts interpret statutes in hard cases. Statutes are frequently ambiguous, and an enacting legislat...
article published in law reviewThere is a peculiar point of agreement between prominent defenders of...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Modem constitutional adjudication is often structured as a conflict between individual rights and st...
In recent years, British courts have treated constitutional statutes differently from ordinary statu...
Judicial review of statutes on constitutional grounds is affected by a cluster of doctrinal practice...
This Article identifies a new method of constitutional interpretation: the use of tradition as const...
The purpose of this Article is to explore the thesis that statutes, like the Constitution and the co...
Although constitutional scholars frequently analyze the relationships between courts and legislature...
Many constitutional principles apply to more than one level of government. This is true not only of ...
Students of constitutional law tend to suspect pretty early on that the Constitution simply means wh...
The study of constitutional law clearly presupposes a theory of interpretation. All too often, howev...
Fidelity to ‘democracy’ is frequently assumed to be an important evaluative criterion for selecting ...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
Courts interpret statutes in hard cases. Statutes are frequently ambiguous, and an enacting legislat...
article published in law reviewThere is a peculiar point of agreement between prominent defenders of...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Modem constitutional adjudication is often structured as a conflict between individual rights and st...
In recent years, British courts have treated constitutional statutes differently from ordinary statu...
Judicial review of statutes on constitutional grounds is affected by a cluster of doctrinal practice...
This Article identifies a new method of constitutional interpretation: the use of tradition as const...
The purpose of this Article is to explore the thesis that statutes, like the Constitution and the co...
Although constitutional scholars frequently analyze the relationships between courts and legislature...
Many constitutional principles apply to more than one level of government. This is true not only of ...
Students of constitutional law tend to suspect pretty early on that the Constitution simply means wh...
The study of constitutional law clearly presupposes a theory of interpretation. All too often, howev...
Fidelity to ‘democracy’ is frequently assumed to be an important evaluative criterion for selecting ...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...