There has been recent discussion of abandoning the literal meaning rule and most of the other rules of statutory construction. A broader principle is favored which will allow the full play of the rational processes of the court. This view has great appeal, and, in terms of freeing judges who apply rules as rules without regard to their object, serves a need. But if it means a sudden release of the judiciary from always starting with a statute as it reads--as it is written--as it has meaning for most of us--it is a harmful suggestion. Law is something more than administration and the court must recognize that it cannot always reach the rational result for the particular case without sacrificing systematic treatment for guess work. There is a...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
The rules of statutory interpretation are under attack as being worthless and even harmful. The purp...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
Judges interpreting statutes evidence a certain ambivalence whether they are interpreting the texts ...
If a statute is to make sense, it must be read in the light of some assumed purpose. A statute merel...
During the past quarter century there has been a constant acceleration in legal periodical comment c...
Professors Jonathan Macey and Geoffrey Miller claim to have set out to provide a positivist explanat...
As Kent Greenwalt\u27s second volume on aspects of legal interpretation, this book analyzes statutor...
What is it that a judge interprets in a statutory interpretation case? This Article shows that the a...
Chief Judge Robert Katzmann has written a compelling short book about statutory interpretation. It c...
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
Discussing the judge\u27s role in interpreting statutes, Justice Holmes wrote that if my fellow cit...
The more interesting features of the non-normative literature on statutory interpretation lie not in...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
The rules of statutory interpretation are under attack as being worthless and even harmful. The purp...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Why do judges interpret statutes the way they do? Positivist analyses aimed at answering this questi...
Judges interpreting statutes evidence a certain ambivalence whether they are interpreting the texts ...
If a statute is to make sense, it must be read in the light of some assumed purpose. A statute merel...
During the past quarter century there has been a constant acceleration in legal periodical comment c...
Professors Jonathan Macey and Geoffrey Miller claim to have set out to provide a positivist explanat...
As Kent Greenwalt\u27s second volume on aspects of legal interpretation, this book analyzes statutor...
What is it that a judge interprets in a statutory interpretation case? This Article shows that the a...
Chief Judge Robert Katzmann has written a compelling short book about statutory interpretation. It c...
This Article reports the results of a survey of a diverse group of forty-two federal appellate judge...
Discussing the judge\u27s role in interpreting statutes, Justice Holmes wrote that if my fellow cit...
The more interesting features of the non-normative literature on statutory interpretation lie not in...
This Article considers whether differences in methods of judicial selection should influence how jud...
No one theory or school of thought consistently dominates judicial application of statutes, but the ...
The rules of statutory interpretation are under attack as being worthless and even harmful. The purp...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...