Prudential standing, it seems, is the latest target in the Roberts Court’s effort to “bring some discipline” to jurisdictional and pseudo-jurisdictional concepts. During the Court’s last two terms, it issued a unanimous opinion that excised the zone of interests test from prudential standing doctrine (Lexmark), two unanimous opinions that questioned federal courts’ prudential discretion to decline jurisdiction (Lexmark and Driehaus), and a bitterly divided opinion in which the classification of a standing principle as prudential or constitutional was decisive (Windsor). Moreover, in Lexmark, the Court suggested that the third party standing principle may not be properly classified as prudential standing either, but it recognized that the qu...
Standing is a precondition for any suit brought in federal court. This Commentary analyzes a Supreme...
No jurisdictional principle is more fundamental to the federal judiciary than the doctrine of standi...
Although scholars have long criticized the standing doctrine for its malleability, its incoherence, ...
Prudential standing, it seems, is the latest target in the Roberts Court’s effort to “bring some dis...
The Supreme Court has clearly treated the Constitution’s Article III standing requirements as mandat...
In the Supreme Court’s 2014 decision in Lexmark International, Inc. v. Static Control Components, In...
Through Lujan and Lexmark, Justice Scalia constructed one of his greatest legacies: a sound and mana...
Threshold limitations on the availability of judicial review are ubiquitous in the modern federal co...
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Their jurisdiction is limited by subject-matter j...
This Article, prepared for the Case Western Reserve Law Review symposium on “Access to the Courts in...
This essay is an invited response to Fred Smiths Vanderbilt Law Review article Undemocratic Restrain...
From the Introduction In the last Term at the United States Supreme Court [2022], standing was the c...
The Supreme Court is set to decide a case requesting reconsideration of a doctrine that has long bed...
In Kowalski v. Tesmer, the Supreme Court held that attorneys lack standing to assert the rights of i...
Standing to raise a claim before a judicial tribunal is notoriously contested. Federal courts during...
Standing is a precondition for any suit brought in federal court. This Commentary analyzes a Supreme...
No jurisdictional principle is more fundamental to the federal judiciary than the doctrine of standi...
Although scholars have long criticized the standing doctrine for its malleability, its incoherence, ...
Prudential standing, it seems, is the latest target in the Roberts Court’s effort to “bring some dis...
The Supreme Court has clearly treated the Constitution’s Article III standing requirements as mandat...
In the Supreme Court’s 2014 decision in Lexmark International, Inc. v. Static Control Components, In...
Through Lujan and Lexmark, Justice Scalia constructed one of his greatest legacies: a sound and mana...
Threshold limitations on the availability of judicial review are ubiquitous in the modern federal co...
Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction. Their jurisdiction is limited by subject-matter j...
This Article, prepared for the Case Western Reserve Law Review symposium on “Access to the Courts in...
This essay is an invited response to Fred Smiths Vanderbilt Law Review article Undemocratic Restrain...
From the Introduction In the last Term at the United States Supreme Court [2022], standing was the c...
The Supreme Court is set to decide a case requesting reconsideration of a doctrine that has long bed...
In Kowalski v. Tesmer, the Supreme Court held that attorneys lack standing to assert the rights of i...
Standing to raise a claim before a judicial tribunal is notoriously contested. Federal courts during...
Standing is a precondition for any suit brought in federal court. This Commentary analyzes a Supreme...
No jurisdictional principle is more fundamental to the federal judiciary than the doctrine of standi...
Although scholars have long criticized the standing doctrine for its malleability, its incoherence, ...