It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all textualists now.” The comment stems from the observation that in the modern, post-Scalia era, all of the Justices on the U.S. Supreme Court pay significant attention to statutory text when construing statutes and, relatedly, that legislative history use by the Court as a whole has declined since its heyday in the 1970s. The account of textualism’s triumph is so prevalent that some scholars have declared purposivism—or at least traditional purposivism—essentially defunct. Two prominent textualist scholars in particular have suggested that there is a “new purposivism” at work on the modern Court and that this purposivism is textually constrained, l...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
In Reading Law, Justice Scalia and his coauthor, Professor Bryan Garner, promise that text-based, st...
This Case Comment first outlines the various methods of statutory construction used by the Supreme C...
It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all text...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
Textualists and intentionalists regularly lock horns over the proper approach to construing statutor...
This Article provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court\u27s use of substantive canons ...
It is by now axiomatic to note that textualism has won the statutory interpretation wars. But contra...
This Article uses the Supreme Court’s 2011 decision in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth to examine the textualist...
The vast majority of statutory interpretation cases are resolved by the federal courts of appeals, n...
In 2015, Justice Elena Kagan famously proclaimed, “We’re all textualists now.” To which I ask, “Whe...
For numberless generations, jurisprudes waged total war in the conflict among textualism, intentiona...
It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretat...
This Article demonstrates that textualist Judges, most notably Justices Scalia, Thomas, and, to a le...
In a new book, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, Justice Antonin Scalia and Bryan Garn...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
In Reading Law, Justice Scalia and his coauthor, Professor Bryan Garner, promise that text-based, st...
This Case Comment first outlines the various methods of statutory construction used by the Supreme C...
It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all text...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
Textualists and intentionalists regularly lock horns over the proper approach to construing statutor...
This Article provides the first empirical study of the Roberts Court\u27s use of substantive canons ...
It is by now axiomatic to note that textualism has won the statutory interpretation wars. But contra...
This Article uses the Supreme Court’s 2011 decision in Bruesewitz v. Wyeth to examine the textualist...
The vast majority of statutory interpretation cases are resolved by the federal courts of appeals, n...
In 2015, Justice Elena Kagan famously proclaimed, “We’re all textualists now.” To which I ask, “Whe...
For numberless generations, jurisprudes waged total war in the conflict among textualism, intentiona...
It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretat...
This Article demonstrates that textualist Judges, most notably Justices Scalia, Thomas, and, to a le...
In a new book, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts, Justice Antonin Scalia and Bryan Garn...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
In Reading Law, Justice Scalia and his coauthor, Professor Bryan Garner, promise that text-based, st...
This Case Comment first outlines the various methods of statutory construction used by the Supreme C...