Conventional wisdom and Supreme Court doctrine hold that the federal Constitution became legally effective on March 4, 1789, when the first session of Congress began. This conclusion is wrong, or at least seriously incomplete. Evidence from the Constitution, its adoption, and contemporaneous understandings reflected in treaties, statutes, and state constitutions demonstrates that the Constitution did not have a single effective date. Instead, different parts of the Constitution took effect in stages, beginning on June 21, 1788, when New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify the document, and continuing at least until April 30, 1789, when President Washington was sworn into office. One must examine each provision to determine to which s...
In seeking to understand and interpret our written Constitution, judges and scholars have often focu...
Over the past twenty years, constitutional law has taken a decidedly historical turn, both in academ...
That an institution of government, like an institution or practice of society, is a growth and not a...
Conventional wisdom and Supreme Court doctrine hold that the federal Constitution became legally eff...
The Constitution is an anachronism, 200 years out of date. Although the Bill of Rights is adequate, ...
David P Currie, The Constitution in Congress: The Federalist Period, 1789-1801. Chicago: University ...
Every constitution defines and is defined by a period in time. Like all law the creation and applica...
The United States may be the prime example of constitutionalization of the legal order. It was the f...
An overview of the reasons that the 1787 Constitution lacked the historical and legal assumptions th...
In recent years one often hears lawyers say that the Constitution is gone; or one hears them echo t...
The United States has experimented with several different constitutions for adding states. Of all of...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, Federalism, in The Cambridge Companion to the United States Constitution...
Countries lacking a single canonical text define the “constitution” to include all laws that perform...
This Article seeks to support that position with an argument in three parts. Part I describes the co...
In seeking to understand and interpret our written Constitution, judges and scholars have often focu...
Over the past twenty years, constitutional law has taken a decidedly historical turn, both in academ...
That an institution of government, like an institution or practice of society, is a growth and not a...
Conventional wisdom and Supreme Court doctrine hold that the federal Constitution became legally eff...
The Constitution is an anachronism, 200 years out of date. Although the Bill of Rights is adequate, ...
David P Currie, The Constitution in Congress: The Federalist Period, 1789-1801. Chicago: University ...
Every constitution defines and is defined by a period in time. Like all law the creation and applica...
The United States may be the prime example of constitutionalization of the legal order. It was the f...
An overview of the reasons that the 1787 Constitution lacked the historical and legal assumptions th...
In recent years one often hears lawyers say that the Constitution is gone; or one hears them echo t...
The United States has experimented with several different constitutions for adding states. Of all of...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, Federalism, in The Cambridge Companion to the United States Constitution...
Countries lacking a single canonical text define the “constitution” to include all laws that perform...
This Article seeks to support that position with an argument in three parts. Part I describes the co...
In seeking to understand and interpret our written Constitution, judges and scholars have often focu...
Over the past twenty years, constitutional law has taken a decidedly historical turn, both in academ...
That an institution of government, like an institution or practice of society, is a growth and not a...