Henry Hart began his 1964 Holmes Lectures by asking what a single would be without baseball. We rolled our eyes at that one, reveling in the maestro\u27s penchant for the occult. As usual, though, Professor Hart was trying to tell us groundlings something precious. He was warning us that conventional legal thinking, by stressing rigorous deconstructive analysis, can obscure an important unity in favor of components that should be analyzed, not solely as freestanding phenomena, but as part of the unity. Without recognition of the unity, analysis of the components risks being carried on in a normative vacuum that will inevitably be filled by another tiebreaking mechanism, often to the detriment of the larger enterprise. A ban on littering i...
This book rereads seven pivotal 20th century jurisprudential and political philosophical positions r...
In a recent article, The Democracy Canon, 62 Stan. L. Rev. 69 (2009), I describe and defend a longst...
The law of democracy is in a state of incoherence. The experiment begun by Baker v. Carr showed gr...
Henry Hart began his 1964 Holmes Lectures by asking what a single would be without baseball. We ro...
When, not long since, I was asked to try to explain the function--if any--of law in a democratic soc...
In democracies that allocate to a court responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the constituti...
Abstract: Democracy require protection of certain fundamental rights, but can we expect courts to fo...
Contemporary constitutional theory, John Hart Ely argues in Democracy and Distrust, is dominated by ...
In democracies that allocate to a court responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the constituti...
John Hart Ely\u27s Democracy and Distrust is an ambitious attempt to create a new theory of judicial...
This Note argues against strong judicial review of direct democracy. Judicial review has been the do...
Though H.L.A. Hart\u27s The Concept of Law has played a central role in jurisprudential debate since...
In 1961, H. L. A. Hart published The Concept of Law, his most extensive and systematic essay in gene...
In this paper I argue that John Dewey developed a philosophy of law that follows directly from his c...
This book addresses a palpable, yet widely neglected, tension in legal discourse. In our everyday le...
This book rereads seven pivotal 20th century jurisprudential and political philosophical positions r...
In a recent article, The Democracy Canon, 62 Stan. L. Rev. 69 (2009), I describe and defend a longst...
The law of democracy is in a state of incoherence. The experiment begun by Baker v. Carr showed gr...
Henry Hart began his 1964 Holmes Lectures by asking what a single would be without baseball. We ro...
When, not long since, I was asked to try to explain the function--if any--of law in a democratic soc...
In democracies that allocate to a court responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the constituti...
Abstract: Democracy require protection of certain fundamental rights, but can we expect courts to fo...
Contemporary constitutional theory, John Hart Ely argues in Democracy and Distrust, is dominated by ...
In democracies that allocate to a court responsibility for interpreting and enforcing the constituti...
John Hart Ely\u27s Democracy and Distrust is an ambitious attempt to create a new theory of judicial...
This Note argues against strong judicial review of direct democracy. Judicial review has been the do...
Though H.L.A. Hart\u27s The Concept of Law has played a central role in jurisprudential debate since...
In 1961, H. L. A. Hart published The Concept of Law, his most extensive and systematic essay in gene...
In this paper I argue that John Dewey developed a philosophy of law that follows directly from his c...
This book addresses a palpable, yet widely neglected, tension in legal discourse. In our everyday le...
This book rereads seven pivotal 20th century jurisprudential and political philosophical positions r...
In a recent article, The Democracy Canon, 62 Stan. L. Rev. 69 (2009), I describe and defend a longst...
The law of democracy is in a state of incoherence. The experiment begun by Baker v. Carr showed gr...