When constitutional lawyers talk about the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied to questions of race, they often men-tion that the spectators’ galleries in Congress were racially segregated when Congress debated the Amendment.1 If the Thirty-Ninth Congress practiced racial segregation, the thinking goes, then it probably did not mean to prohibit racial segregation.2 As an argument about constitutional interpretation, this line of thinking has both strengths and weaknesses. But this brief Essay is not about the interpretive consequences, if any, of segregation in the congressional galleries during the 1860s. It is about the factual claim that the galleries were segregated
Segregation in the public schools on the basis of race or color pursuant to law has been declared un...
It is by now an open secret that current interpretations of the meaning of the equal protection clau...
This Article examines the argument that the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment was ...
When constitutional lawyers talk about the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied t...
Segregation of races, particularly separation of white and colored races, has long been condoned by ...
Sociologists have rejected the old concept, enshrined in William Graham Sumner\u27s Folkways, publis...
Some sixty years ago in Plessy v. Ferguson the Supreme Court of the United States adopted the now ce...
In the face of this common understanding of the vagueness of much of the constitutional text, Berger...
This Article will explore the origins of the Court’s color-blind interpretation of the Fourteenth Am...
This Symposium Article highlights some of the differences in the application of the Fourteenth Amend...
In Part I of the Article, I examine early cases in which the Court described segregation as a form o...
Mr. Justice Frankfurter has remarked: In law also the right answer usually depends on putting the r...
The opinion in Buchanan v. Warley reflects the confusion and difficulty of that troublesome problem,...
Before setting out on the direct and noble march to the Court\u27s conclusion in the Segregation Cas...
Some commentators, perhaps a minority, have argued that the Equal Protection Clause should be read t...
Segregation in the public schools on the basis of race or color pursuant to law has been declared un...
It is by now an open secret that current interpretations of the meaning of the equal protection clau...
This Article examines the argument that the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment was ...
When constitutional lawyers talk about the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied t...
Segregation of races, particularly separation of white and colored races, has long been condoned by ...
Sociologists have rejected the old concept, enshrined in William Graham Sumner\u27s Folkways, publis...
Some sixty years ago in Plessy v. Ferguson the Supreme Court of the United States adopted the now ce...
In the face of this common understanding of the vagueness of much of the constitutional text, Berger...
This Article will explore the origins of the Court’s color-blind interpretation of the Fourteenth Am...
This Symposium Article highlights some of the differences in the application of the Fourteenth Amend...
In Part I of the Article, I examine early cases in which the Court described segregation as a form o...
Mr. Justice Frankfurter has remarked: In law also the right answer usually depends on putting the r...
The opinion in Buchanan v. Warley reflects the confusion and difficulty of that troublesome problem,...
Before setting out on the direct and noble march to the Court\u27s conclusion in the Segregation Cas...
Some commentators, perhaps a minority, have argued that the Equal Protection Clause should be read t...
Segregation in the public schools on the basis of race or color pursuant to law has been declared un...
It is by now an open secret that current interpretations of the meaning of the equal protection clau...
This Article examines the argument that the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment was ...