This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and methods of constitutional interpretation. Several scholars assert that our reasons for respecting the United States Constitution as law—despite its imperfection and dead authors—strongly influence the proper method of interpretation for that text. The “why” of authority supposedly drives the “how” of interpretation. But this relationship can be better understood. To the extent an authority theory can be distinguished from interpretive method, it is true that the former will identify what counts as law to be interpreted. Beyond that, the asserted relationship fades. First, some authority theories actually depend on a given interpretive method rat...
Rejecting judicial supremacy in constitutional interpretation, this paper argues that understanding ...
Fidelity to ‘democracy’ is frequently assumed to be an important evaluative criterion for selecting ...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and met...
This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and met...
This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and met...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
"Judges should interpret the law, not make it." Nearly everyone assents to this proposition (or some...
Interpretation is the means by which the Constitution and its clauses are brought to bear on actual ...
This Article provides a counterbalance to current trends in the constitutional interpretation debate...
Constitutional theory lacks an account of when each of the familiar sources of authority-text, origi...
This article is about two things; one general, the other specific. The general point is about the na...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
Rejecting judicial supremacy in constitutional interpretation, this paper argues that understanding ...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
Rejecting judicial supremacy in constitutional interpretation, this paper argues that understanding ...
Fidelity to ‘democracy’ is frequently assumed to be an important evaluative criterion for selecting ...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and met...
This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and met...
This Article attempts to reset the relationship between theories of constitutional authority and met...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
"Judges should interpret the law, not make it." Nearly everyone assents to this proposition (or some...
Interpretation is the means by which the Constitution and its clauses are brought to bear on actual ...
This Article provides a counterbalance to current trends in the constitutional interpretation debate...
Constitutional theory lacks an account of when each of the familiar sources of authority-text, origi...
This article is about two things; one general, the other specific. The general point is about the na...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
Rejecting judicial supremacy in constitutional interpretation, this paper argues that understanding ...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...
Rejecting judicial supremacy in constitutional interpretation, this paper argues that understanding ...
Fidelity to ‘democracy’ is frequently assumed to be an important evaluative criterion for selecting ...
It is a remarkable fact of American constitutional practice that we cannot agree on a methodology of...