There is only one circumstance, as I read the Constitution, which authorizes the federal government to intrude or interfere with the governmental structure of a state. That would occur under the provisions of section 4 of article IV, which, in pertinent part, state: The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican form of Government .... This was the question, if indeed there was a federal question, to be determined in the earlier Baker v. Carr and the reapportionment cases. To rely on the fourteenth amendment for authority to establish by judicial decree a new system of government for each of the fifty states is, first, to misread the history of that amendment and, second, to substitute political theory for co...
It is remarkable that in this second century of the republic our courts should be so vehemently assa...
The Constitution is designed to protect individual liberty and equality by diffusing power among the...
We have recently been reminded that one of the current and recurrent quandaries of the Supreme Court...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
A good deal of modern debate in constitutional law has concerned the appropriate methods for constru...
Brewing tensions between state governments and the federal government have reached a boiling point u...
The question is not what power the federal government ought to have but what powers in fact have bee...
Recent legal and political activity and renewed academic discussion have focused considerable attent...
The recent philosdphical shift of the Supreme Court toward a more restrained or conservative appro...
The Supreme Court is currently faced with a direct conflict over allocation of federal and state aut...
In contemporary rights jurisprudence and theory, the Fourteenth Amendment and the Federal Bill of Ri...
It is repeatedly claimed in high places that the action of the Supreme Court in declaring acts of Co...
State supreme courts occasionally rely on the provisions of their own state constitutions to expand ...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
The lack of both legislative and judicial integrity led to a governmental system which is federalist...
It is remarkable that in this second century of the republic our courts should be so vehemently assa...
The Constitution is designed to protect individual liberty and equality by diffusing power among the...
We have recently been reminded that one of the current and recurrent quandaries of the Supreme Court...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
A good deal of modern debate in constitutional law has concerned the appropriate methods for constru...
Brewing tensions between state governments and the federal government have reached a boiling point u...
The question is not what power the federal government ought to have but what powers in fact have bee...
Recent legal and political activity and renewed academic discussion have focused considerable attent...
The recent philosdphical shift of the Supreme Court toward a more restrained or conservative appro...
The Supreme Court is currently faced with a direct conflict over allocation of federal and state aut...
In contemporary rights jurisprudence and theory, the Fourteenth Amendment and the Federal Bill of Ri...
It is repeatedly claimed in high places that the action of the Supreme Court in declaring acts of Co...
State supreme courts occasionally rely on the provisions of their own state constitutions to expand ...
In a famous 1977 article, Justice William Brennan called on state courts to interpret the individual...
The lack of both legislative and judicial integrity led to a governmental system which is federalist...
It is remarkable that in this second century of the republic our courts should be so vehemently assa...
The Constitution is designed to protect individual liberty and equality by diffusing power among the...
We have recently been reminded that one of the current and recurrent quandaries of the Supreme Court...