This article criticizes the Maher/Harris conditions doctrine on two levels. At the first level, it suggests that the Maher/Harris doctrine cannot justify the Court’s decisions to uphold government withdrawals of funding from rights-exercises. At the second level, after exposing and contrasting the definitional presuppositions of the Court in Maher and Harris with previous cases, the article suggests that the Maher/Harris doctrine is a failure because it uses utterly inadequate rights theory to resolve emerging issues of conflicting human need and conscience, issues which are mediated by government action. The author creates a space for a discussion of a new framework for adjudicating the role of government when it acts as intervenor among c...
Part I of the article lays out the major academic criticisms of DeShaney v. Winnebago County Departm...
In this Article, Professor Simons suggests that the hoary threat/offer distinction helps explain and...
Government lawyers may be discharged for failing to carry out an assignment that violates their cons...
This article criticizes the Maher/Harris conditions doctrine on two levels. At the first level, it s...
This Article proposes that courts should subject unconstitutional conditions cases to intermediate s...
This article explores a crucial moment in American legal history, known as the Lochner era, in which...
In this Article, Professor McConnell contends that the courts\u27 treatment of funding of religious ...
This article contends that, for purposes of settling the law, courts entertaining civil rights lawsu...
The article argues that the non-existence of welfare rights in American Constitutional law, and the ...
The Article focuses on Justice Tobriner\u27s activism in such areas as freedom to contract, adhesion...
In this article, I consider judicial disapproval as a form of non-binding review of the constitution...
In this Article, Professor Sullivan postulates that the unconstitutional conditions doctrine is a do...
In this Article, Professor Marshall claims that a general theoretical approach to the unconstitution...
Upon enacting the Legal Services Corporation Act in 1974, Congress created the Legal Services Corpor...
This article explores a crucial moment in American legal history, known as the Lochner era, in which...
Part I of the article lays out the major academic criticisms of DeShaney v. Winnebago County Departm...
In this Article, Professor Simons suggests that the hoary threat/offer distinction helps explain and...
Government lawyers may be discharged for failing to carry out an assignment that violates their cons...
This article criticizes the Maher/Harris conditions doctrine on two levels. At the first level, it s...
This Article proposes that courts should subject unconstitutional conditions cases to intermediate s...
This article explores a crucial moment in American legal history, known as the Lochner era, in which...
In this Article, Professor McConnell contends that the courts\u27 treatment of funding of religious ...
This article contends that, for purposes of settling the law, courts entertaining civil rights lawsu...
The article argues that the non-existence of welfare rights in American Constitutional law, and the ...
The Article focuses on Justice Tobriner\u27s activism in such areas as freedom to contract, adhesion...
In this article, I consider judicial disapproval as a form of non-binding review of the constitution...
In this Article, Professor Sullivan postulates that the unconstitutional conditions doctrine is a do...
In this Article, Professor Marshall claims that a general theoretical approach to the unconstitution...
Upon enacting the Legal Services Corporation Act in 1974, Congress created the Legal Services Corpor...
This article explores a crucial moment in American legal history, known as the Lochner era, in which...
Part I of the article lays out the major academic criticisms of DeShaney v. Winnebago County Departm...
In this Article, Professor Simons suggests that the hoary threat/offer distinction helps explain and...
Government lawyers may be discharged for failing to carry out an assignment that violates their cons...