Over the past three decades, since the late Justice Scalia joined the Court and ushered in a new era of text-focused statutory analysis, there has been a marked move towards the holistic interpretation of statutes and “making sense of the corpus juris.” In particular, Justices on the modern Supreme Court now regularly compare or analogize between statutes that contain similar words or phrases—what some have called the “whole code rule.” Despite the prevalence of this interpretive practice, however, scholars have paid little attention to how the Court actually engages in whole code comparisons on the ground. This Article provides the first empirical and doctrinal analysis of how the modern Supreme Court uses whole code comparisons, based on ...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
The Supreme Court tells us that a Fourth Amendment “search” is a matter of “reasonable expectations ...
Scholars and judges have long disagreed on whether courts of appeals construing statutes ought to ad...
This Article is the first in-depth empirical and doctrinal analysis of differences in statutory inte...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
Statutory interpretation often seems like a doctrinal and jurisprudential abyss. We didn\u27t need ...
The Supreme Court is thought to use a method of statutory interpretation called the new textualism ...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...
This Article offers the first close study of statutory interpretation in several state courts of las...
This Article examines the Roberts Court’s statutory cases from its 2005–2008 Terms, beginning with c...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
The Supreme Court tells us that a Fourth Amendment “search” is a matter of “reasonable expectations ...
Scholars and judges have long disagreed on whether courts of appeals construing statutes ought to ad...
This Article is the first in-depth empirical and doctrinal analysis of differences in statutory inte...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
Statutory interpretation often seems like a doctrinal and jurisprudential abyss. We didn\u27t need ...
The Supreme Court is thought to use a method of statutory interpretation called the new textualism ...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...
Interpretive methodology lies at the core of the Supreme Court\u27s persistent modern debate about s...
This Article offers the first close study of statutory interpretation in several state courts of las...
This Article examines the Roberts Court’s statutory cases from its 2005–2008 Terms, beginning with c...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
The Supreme Court tells us that a Fourth Amendment “search” is a matter of “reasonable expectations ...