In this Essay, I respond briefly to 18 articles contributed to this special Festschrift issue of the Connecticut Law Review. All but one of the contributions fall within two categories: constitutional change and constitutional interpretation. These topics have engaged me for most of my career as a legal scholar. While every one of the contributions sheds new and useful light on these subjects, I usually have some differences with the interpretations argued in them. Of course, I can only treat those differences superficially here. In each case, moreover, my comments should not obscure my sincere admiration of and appreciation for the authors’ efforts
A Review of Responding to Imperfection: The Theory and Practice of Constitutional Amendment by Sanf...
In this short Article, I shall express some grounds for respectful skepticism, both about whether Ro...
The editors of Hastings Law Journal have invited me to comment on Professor Brian Leiter’s provocati...
In this Essay, I respond briefly to 18 articles contributed to this special Festschrift issue of the...
Cass Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule argue in Interpretation and lnstitutions that judicial interpretat...
Any author would be pleased at having his or her work taken as seriously as mine has been by the con...
In 1977, Justice Brennan delivered his now famous plea for a renaissance in state constitutionalism....
In response to Richard Albert’s Quasi-Constitutional Amendments, 65 BUFF. L. REV. 739 (2017)
Understanding American constitutionalism can be advanced by distinguishing three matrices of its pec...
Despite the tremendous renaissance of comparative constitutional law, the comparative aspect of the ...
The three reviews of The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction featured in the preceding pages...
Professor Brilmayer responds to the commentaries of Professors Laycock, Tushnet, and George
One of Professor Lawson’s first students, alluding to a 1985 article with the provocative title “Why...
Professor Hoffheimer has provided us with a striking picture of two important strands of our constit...
The place of the Constitution in American life nowhere appears more clearly than in the form of our ...
A Review of Responding to Imperfection: The Theory and Practice of Constitutional Amendment by Sanf...
In this short Article, I shall express some grounds for respectful skepticism, both about whether Ro...
The editors of Hastings Law Journal have invited me to comment on Professor Brian Leiter’s provocati...
In this Essay, I respond briefly to 18 articles contributed to this special Festschrift issue of the...
Cass Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule argue in Interpretation and lnstitutions that judicial interpretat...
Any author would be pleased at having his or her work taken as seriously as mine has been by the con...
In 1977, Justice Brennan delivered his now famous plea for a renaissance in state constitutionalism....
In response to Richard Albert’s Quasi-Constitutional Amendments, 65 BUFF. L. REV. 739 (2017)
Understanding American constitutionalism can be advanced by distinguishing three matrices of its pec...
Despite the tremendous renaissance of comparative constitutional law, the comparative aspect of the ...
The three reviews of The Bill of Rights: Creation and Reconstruction featured in the preceding pages...
Professor Brilmayer responds to the commentaries of Professors Laycock, Tushnet, and George
One of Professor Lawson’s first students, alluding to a 1985 article with the provocative title “Why...
Professor Hoffheimer has provided us with a striking picture of two important strands of our constit...
The place of the Constitution in American life nowhere appears more clearly than in the form of our ...
A Review of Responding to Imperfection: The Theory and Practice of Constitutional Amendment by Sanf...
In this short Article, I shall express some grounds for respectful skepticism, both about whether Ro...
The editors of Hastings Law Journal have invited me to comment on Professor Brian Leiter’s provocati...