According to Justice David Souter, it is most familiar history that back when the Supreme Court took a restricted view of the commerce power, it also routinely invalidated state social and economic legislation under an expansive conception of Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process. As the word routinely suggests, Souter evidently believed that this Lochner Court struck down a large number of laws on substantive due process grounds\u27 during the years 1897 to 1937. As discussed later, other observers agree. Although they recognize that the old Court rejected more substantive due process attacks than it accepted, they also suggest that cases of the latter kind numbered approximately 200. This means that during the forty years com...
One of the fundamental elements of our government system is the broad concept of a right to fair tre...
There are two classes of cases which may arise under the due process provisions of the 5th and 14t...
In this brief Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on Lochner v. New York, Professor Randy Barnett as...
Substantive due process has been of great importance to the decision of many Supreme Court cases sin...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
Almost fifty years after the Supreme Court revived the doctrine, substantive due process remains a p...
The conventional narrative that courts and legal scholars tell about the repudiation of Lochnerism i...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
This thesis surveys the comparative performance of the Federal and State Supreme Courts in the area ...
From its conceptual origin in Magna Charta, due process of law has required that government can depr...
Post-New Deal constitutionalism is in search of a theory that justifies judicial intervention on beh...
To say that the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Lochner v. New York is infamous is an understatement....
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
In the antebellum nineteenth century, courts often voided legislative acts for substantive unreasona...
In our system of government, the Constitution has conferred a guarantees of certain rights to its ci...
One of the fundamental elements of our government system is the broad concept of a right to fair tre...
There are two classes of cases which may arise under the due process provisions of the 5th and 14t...
In this brief Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on Lochner v. New York, Professor Randy Barnett as...
Substantive due process has been of great importance to the decision of many Supreme Court cases sin...
The coming of the New Deal may have spelled the end of the Lochner era in the federal courts, but in...
Almost fifty years after the Supreme Court revived the doctrine, substantive due process remains a p...
The conventional narrative that courts and legal scholars tell about the repudiation of Lochnerism i...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
This thesis surveys the comparative performance of the Federal and State Supreme Courts in the area ...
From its conceptual origin in Magna Charta, due process of law has required that government can depr...
Post-New Deal constitutionalism is in search of a theory that justifies judicial intervention on beh...
To say that the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Lochner v. New York is infamous is an understatement....
This article, prepared for the St. Louis University Law Journal\u27s issue on “Teaching the Fourteen...
In the antebellum nineteenth century, courts often voided legislative acts for substantive unreasona...
In our system of government, the Constitution has conferred a guarantees of certain rights to its ci...
One of the fundamental elements of our government system is the broad concept of a right to fair tre...
There are two classes of cases which may arise under the due process provisions of the 5th and 14t...
In this brief Foreword to a forthcoming symposium on Lochner v. New York, Professor Randy Barnett as...