Arguments based on historical practice are a mainstay of debates about the constitutional separation of powers. Surprisingly, however, there has been little sustained academic attention to the proper role of historical practice in this context. The scant existing scholarship is either limited to specific subject areas or focused primarily on judicial doctrine without addressing the use of historical practice in broader conceptual or theoretical terms. To the extent that the issue has been discussed, accounts of how historical practice should inform the separation of powers often require “acquiescence” by the branch of government whose prerogatives the practice implicates. Such acquiescence is commonly seen as critical for historical practic...
Article IV imposes prohibitions on interstate discrimination that are central to our status as a sin...
Casual observers of the use of signing statements likely would believe they are a new phenomenon. Th...
How fragile a thing, law. Not long ago, the notion that Americans could be seized off the streets, a...
Arguments based on historical practice are a mainstay of debates about the constitutional separation...
Civil procedure, more than any other of the basic law-school courses, conveys to students an underst...
Last term, five Justices on the Supreme Court flirted with the possibility of revisiting the Court’s...
In several recent high-profile cases, federal district judges have issued injunctions that apply acr...
Courts look at text differently in high-stakes cases. Statutory language that would otherwise be ‘un...
This article develops and defends a general approach to constitutional federalism doctrine. My posi...
Recently the United States Supreme Court has ruled, in a series of cases beginning with Ornelas v. U...
In a decision that shocked the inter-American human rights world, the Argentinean Supreme Court in F...
In these Holmes Lectures, delivered a century after the publication of Oliver Wendell Holmes\u27s gr...
The sources utilized in this thesis each serve a particular function in relation to the theoretical ...
Conflicts of interest are endemic to almost all prosecutors’ discretionary decisions, and are the so...
In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in instances of Republican-dominated state legis...
Article IV imposes prohibitions on interstate discrimination that are central to our status as a sin...
Casual observers of the use of signing statements likely would believe they are a new phenomenon. Th...
How fragile a thing, law. Not long ago, the notion that Americans could be seized off the streets, a...
Arguments based on historical practice are a mainstay of debates about the constitutional separation...
Civil procedure, more than any other of the basic law-school courses, conveys to students an underst...
Last term, five Justices on the Supreme Court flirted with the possibility of revisiting the Court’s...
In several recent high-profile cases, federal district judges have issued injunctions that apply acr...
Courts look at text differently in high-stakes cases. Statutory language that would otherwise be ‘un...
This article develops and defends a general approach to constitutional federalism doctrine. My posi...
Recently the United States Supreme Court has ruled, in a series of cases beginning with Ornelas v. U...
In a decision that shocked the inter-American human rights world, the Argentinean Supreme Court in F...
In these Holmes Lectures, delivered a century after the publication of Oliver Wendell Holmes\u27s gr...
The sources utilized in this thesis each serve a particular function in relation to the theoretical ...
Conflicts of interest are endemic to almost all prosecutors’ discretionary decisions, and are the so...
In recent years, there has been a dramatic increase in instances of Republican-dominated state legis...
Article IV imposes prohibitions on interstate discrimination that are central to our status as a sin...
Casual observers of the use of signing statements likely would believe they are a new phenomenon. Th...
How fragile a thing, law. Not long ago, the notion that Americans could be seized off the streets, a...