No jurisdictional principle is more fundamental to the federal judiciary than the doctrine of standing. Before litigants may avail themselves of the tremendous power vested in the federal judiciary, plaintiffs must first establish that they are appropriately situated to assert a legal claim before a court. In analyzing whether a plaintiff possesses the requisite standing to maintain a legal challenge, the Supreme Court has stressed that a court’s analysis must be blind to the underlying dispute: “The fundamental aspect of standing is that it focuses on the party seeking to get his complaint before a federal court and not on the issues he wishes to have adjudicated.” Unfortunately, an examination of the Supreme Court’s application of stand...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
Standing is a precondition for any suit brought in federal court. This Commentary analyzes a Supreme...
No jurisdictional principle is more fundamental to the federal judiciary than the doctrine of standi...
When can a litigant assert someone else’s rights in federal court? The courts currently purport to a...
Third-party standing is relevant to a wide range of constitutional and statutory cases. The Supreme ...
Standing is a long held, judicially-created doctrine intended to establish the proper role of courts...
The Supreme Court insists that Article III of the Constitution requires a litigant to have standing ...
In Kowalski v. Tesmer, the Supreme Court held that attorneys lack standing to assert the rights of i...
From the Introduction In the last Term at the United States Supreme Court [2022], standing was the c...
The Supreme Court has clearly treated the Constitution’s Article III standing requirements as mandat...
The Supreme Court is charged with protecting the Constitution, but it is not a roving commission. It...
The Article III standing doctrine ” with its three requirements of injury in fact causation and red...
The author examines the development and current status of third-party standing in the federal courts...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
Standing is a precondition for any suit brought in federal court. This Commentary analyzes a Supreme...
No jurisdictional principle is more fundamental to the federal judiciary than the doctrine of standi...
When can a litigant assert someone else’s rights in federal court? The courts currently purport to a...
Third-party standing is relevant to a wide range of constitutional and statutory cases. The Supreme ...
Standing is a long held, judicially-created doctrine intended to establish the proper role of courts...
The Supreme Court insists that Article III of the Constitution requires a litigant to have standing ...
In Kowalski v. Tesmer, the Supreme Court held that attorneys lack standing to assert the rights of i...
From the Introduction In the last Term at the United States Supreme Court [2022], standing was the c...
The Supreme Court has clearly treated the Constitution’s Article III standing requirements as mandat...
The Supreme Court is charged with protecting the Constitution, but it is not a roving commission. It...
The Article III standing doctrine ” with its three requirements of injury in fact causation and red...
The author examines the development and current status of third-party standing in the federal courts...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
Unless the plaintiff has a personal stake in the outcome, Article III of the United States Constitut...
Something surprising happened in the 2013 marriage equality cases that did not involve striking down...
Standing is a precondition for any suit brought in federal court. This Commentary analyzes a Supreme...