Critics of the proliferation of omnibus legislation in Congress have suggested that state constitutions offer a potential solution. Forty-three state constitutions include some sort of “single-subject” rule, that is, the requirement that each act of the legislature be limited to a single subject. Many of these provisions date back to the early and mid-nineteenth century, and, collectively, they have been the subject of literally thousands of court decisions. Nor is the rule a relic from a bygone era. In the last two decades, state courts have used single-subject rules to invalidate laws dealing with, inter alia, firearms regulation, abortion, tort reform, immigration, local minimum wage laws, sex offenders, enhanced criminal penalties, and ...
Contemporary debates about state constitutional law have concentrated on the role of state constitut...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...
Critics of the proliferation of omnibus legislation in Congress have pointed to the constitutions of...
Most states’ courts do not rigorously enforce the single subject rule contained in their constitutio...
One hundred and forty-seven years after its adoption, the one-subject rule of the Ohio Constitution ...
Eighteen states allow citizens to independently propose constitutional amendments through the initia...
This Note argues that the single subject rule, a procedural restriction, can be used to facially cha...
Despite generating thousands of cases on important public issues, the single subject rule remains a ...
Most states require voter initiatives to embrace only a single subject, and courts have invalidated ...
The Missouri single subject provision, which requires that each bill enacted by the Missouri Legisla...
Recognizing that state courts are beginning to review procedural challenges more rigorously, this Ar...
What makes a constitution difficult to amend? The answer varies across jurisdictions. In the United ...
Unlike the United States Constitution, which has been amended only twentyseven times since its adopt...
Since the nineteenth century, most states have had constitutional clauses prohibiting “special laws....
Contemporary debates about state constitutional law have concentrated on the role of state constitut...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...
Critics of the proliferation of omnibus legislation in Congress have pointed to the constitutions of...
Most states’ courts do not rigorously enforce the single subject rule contained in their constitutio...
One hundred and forty-seven years after its adoption, the one-subject rule of the Ohio Constitution ...
Eighteen states allow citizens to independently propose constitutional amendments through the initia...
This Note argues that the single subject rule, a procedural restriction, can be used to facially cha...
Despite generating thousands of cases on important public issues, the single subject rule remains a ...
Most states require voter initiatives to embrace only a single subject, and courts have invalidated ...
The Missouri single subject provision, which requires that each bill enacted by the Missouri Legisla...
Recognizing that state courts are beginning to review procedural challenges more rigorously, this Ar...
What makes a constitution difficult to amend? The answer varies across jurisdictions. In the United ...
Unlike the United States Constitution, which has been amended only twentyseven times since its adopt...
Since the nineteenth century, most states have had constitutional clauses prohibiting “special laws....
Contemporary debates about state constitutional law have concentrated on the role of state constitut...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
It has been surprisingly difficult to extricate constitutional litigation from torts. In this Articl...