There are tremendous disparities between high stakes original actions between states before the U.S. Supreme Court, where there is no waiver of federal sovereign immunity, and other types of cases in the lower courts, where a plethora of immunity waivers allow states and other parties to seek relief from the federal government for Fifth Amendment takings, unlawful agency action, and tort claims. Federal actions or omissions are often at the heart of the dispute, and federal involvement may be crucial for purposes of providing an equitable remedy to the state parties, but there is no reliable mechanism for bringing the federal government to an original action before the Supreme Court. This Article shows how federal sovereign immunity stands ...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
In discussing the current statute abrogating the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the authors trace t...
The purpose of the present Article is not to propose yet another route toward logical reconciliation...
There are tremendous disparities between high stakes original actions between states before th...
The morass of recent Supreme Court state sovereign immunity jurisprudence is closely examined. Rathe...
The Supreme Court closed this millennium with a virtual celebration of state sovereignty, protecting...
The Supreme Court closed this millennium with a virtual celebration of state sovereignty, protecting...
What are the constitutional parameters of state sovereign immunity? The Court has made clear that ce...
With the enduring doctrine of federal sovereign immunity, it is too late in the day to suggest that ...
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
States normally enjoy immunity from suit by private parties, but they may waive this immunity. The S...
Sovereign immunity jurisprudence has always been a confusing jumble of assumptions which seem incomp...
This article will explore recent court decisions discussion the issue of sovereign state immunity fr...
As I suggest below in Part I, federal sovereign immunity was a doctrine of limited effect in the ear...
In this article, I argue that state sovereign and official immunities, insofar as they bar recovery ...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
In discussing the current statute abrogating the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the authors trace t...
The purpose of the present Article is not to propose yet another route toward logical reconciliation...
There are tremendous disparities between high stakes original actions between states before th...
The morass of recent Supreme Court state sovereign immunity jurisprudence is closely examined. Rathe...
The Supreme Court closed this millennium with a virtual celebration of state sovereignty, protecting...
The Supreme Court closed this millennium with a virtual celebration of state sovereignty, protecting...
What are the constitutional parameters of state sovereign immunity? The Court has made clear that ce...
With the enduring doctrine of federal sovereign immunity, it is too late in the day to suggest that ...
This Article attempts to clarify the doctrine of sovereign immunity and its exceptions in its applic...
States normally enjoy immunity from suit by private parties, but they may waive this immunity. The S...
Sovereign immunity jurisprudence has always been a confusing jumble of assumptions which seem incomp...
This article will explore recent court decisions discussion the issue of sovereign state immunity fr...
As I suggest below in Part I, federal sovereign immunity was a doctrine of limited effect in the ear...
In this article, I argue that state sovereign and official immunities, insofar as they bar recovery ...
The doctrine of sovereign immunity generally bars suits against the federal government. The Federal ...
In discussing the current statute abrogating the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the authors trace t...
The purpose of the present Article is not to propose yet another route toward logical reconciliation...