New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a fundamental right? The Court’s previous answers have been disappointing. While the Court has hinted that it might recognize some minimal right to education, it has thus far refused to do so. To recognize a fundamental right to education, the Court would have to overcome two basic problems. First, the Court needs an originalist theory for why our Constitution protects education, particularly since the word education does not even appear in the Constitution. Second, the right to education implicates complex questions regarding its scope. Those questions would require the Court to determine the quality of education the Constitution requires. Ne...
This Article makes two claims, one descriptive and the other normative. The descriptive claim is tha...
This Article analyzes the intersection of state constitutional law right at stake and the responsibi...
This Article explains why there is a fundamental duty for the government to provide public education...
New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a...
While litigation continues in an effort to establish a fundamental right to education under the U.S....
Benjamin Franklin once wrote “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”[1] However, nearly...
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protect...
This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamen...
A fundamental right to education has long been recognized in constitutions around the world. In Sout...
This paper suggests that although each state within the United States currently recognizes a right t...
This article relies upon the political and economic analysis of such great thinkers as Aristotle and...
This paper tackles the question: Can universal access to education be considered a fundamental right...
In Retained by the People, Daniel A. Farber argues for a robust renaissance of Ninth Amendment juris...
Confronting persistent and widening inequality in educational opportunity, advocates have regarded t...
In the past decade, a number of state courts have found a new fundamental right to education in ce...
This Article makes two claims, one descriptive and the other normative. The descriptive claim is tha...
This Article analyzes the intersection of state constitutional law right at stake and the responsibi...
This Article explains why there is a fundamental duty for the government to provide public education...
New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a...
While litigation continues in an effort to establish a fundamental right to education under the U.S....
Benjamin Franklin once wrote “An investment in knowledge pays the best interest.”[1] However, nearly...
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protect...
This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamen...
A fundamental right to education has long been recognized in constitutions around the world. In Sout...
This paper suggests that although each state within the United States currently recognizes a right t...
This article relies upon the political and economic analysis of such great thinkers as Aristotle and...
This paper tackles the question: Can universal access to education be considered a fundamental right...
In Retained by the People, Daniel A. Farber argues for a robust renaissance of Ninth Amendment juris...
Confronting persistent and widening inequality in educational opportunity, advocates have regarded t...
In the past decade, a number of state courts have found a new fundamental right to education in ce...
This Article makes two claims, one descriptive and the other normative. The descriptive claim is tha...
This Article analyzes the intersection of state constitutional law right at stake and the responsibi...
This Article explains why there is a fundamental duty for the government to provide public education...