The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. That project—typified by but not limited to Justice Antonin Scalia’s brand of textualism—has been doomed because even its staunchest supporters have been unwilling to carry it out. The rules that judges employ are too numerous to be predictably chosen. There is no ranking among them. They are not treated as blackletter, precedential law. Even formalist-textualist judges, it turns out, crave interpretive flexibility, do not want to be controlled by other courts or Congress, and feel the need to show their interpretive actions are democratically linked to Congress. What we actually have instead is an approach whose legitimacy depends, in large par...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
This is the second of two Articles relaying the results of the most extensive survey to date of 137 ...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
Justice Scalia, in the end, was no interpretive formalist. He would not be pleased to hear this clai...
A promising new school of statutory interpretation has emerged that tries to wed the work of Congres...
published article in law reviewWhat role should the realities of the legislative drafting process pl...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...
The sporadic way that various members of the Supreme Court and the legal community treat the princip...
Despite all that has been written about the choice between purposivist, intentionalist, and textuali...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
The vast majority of statutory interpretation cases are resolved by the federal courts of appeals, n...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
Statutory interpretation often seems like a doctrinal and jurisprudential abyss. We didn\u27t need ...
In Reading Law, Justice Scalia and his coauthor, Professor Bryan Garner, promise that text-based, st...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
This is the second of two Articles relaying the results of the most extensive survey to date of 137 ...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
Justice Scalia, in the end, was no interpretive formalist. He would not be pleased to hear this clai...
A promising new school of statutory interpretation has emerged that tries to wed the work of Congres...
published article in law reviewWhat role should the realities of the legislative drafting process pl...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...
The sporadic way that various members of the Supreme Court and the legal community treat the princip...
Despite all that has been written about the choice between purposivist, intentionalist, and textuali...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
The vast majority of statutory interpretation cases are resolved by the federal courts of appeals, n...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
Statutory interpretation often seems like a doctrinal and jurisprudential abyss. We didn\u27t need ...
In Reading Law, Justice Scalia and his coauthor, Professor Bryan Garner, promise that text-based, st...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
This is the second of two Articles relaying the results of the most extensive survey to date of 137 ...