https://kent-islandora.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/facultybooks/82/thumbnail.jpgConstitutional scholars Christopher P. Banks and John C. Blakeman offer the most current and the first book-length study of the U.S. Supreme Court’s “new federalism” begun by the Rehnquist Court and now flourishing under Chief Justice John Roberts. Using descriptive and empirical methods in political science and legal scholarship, and informed by diverse approaches to judicial ideology, from historical to new institutionalist, they investigate how the U.S. Supreme Court rulings have shaped the political principle of federalism. While the Rehnquist Court reinvorgorated new federalism by protecting state sovereignty and set new constitutional limits on federal powe...
This article broadly examines the conservative Rehnquist Court\u27s federalism doctrines and, in doi...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This essay is part of a symposium on a series o...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
When Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito joined the United States Supreme Court, most commentato...
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and the Supreme Court under his leadership have been charged, res...
The weakening of the levels of federalism due to New Deal policies and the 1937 Court-packing scanda...
For several decades the Court has invoked “state dignity” to animate federalism reasoning in isolate...
Most scholars agree that federalism was central to the Rehnquist Court\u27s constitutional agenda. B...
Several intriguing and difficult questions about the federal-state allocation of power remain open e...
This paper starts from the proposition that although the Rehnquist Court imposed limits on federal p...
In the period leading to the Civil War, debate over federalism and states’ rights developed into the...
Disputes involving the boundaries of state versus federal power make up a substantial portion of the...
The recent philosdphical shift of the Supreme Court toward a more restrained or conservative appro...
We attempt to articulate a vision of federalism, particularly the Rehnquist version of federalism. ...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
This article broadly examines the conservative Rehnquist Court\u27s federalism doctrines and, in doi...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This essay is part of a symposium on a series o...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
When Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito joined the United States Supreme Court, most commentato...
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and the Supreme Court under his leadership have been charged, res...
The weakening of the levels of federalism due to New Deal policies and the 1937 Court-packing scanda...
For several decades the Court has invoked “state dignity” to animate federalism reasoning in isolate...
Most scholars agree that federalism was central to the Rehnquist Court\u27s constitutional agenda. B...
Several intriguing and difficult questions about the federal-state allocation of power remain open e...
This paper starts from the proposition that although the Rehnquist Court imposed limits on federal p...
In the period leading to the Civil War, debate over federalism and states’ rights developed into the...
Disputes involving the boundaries of state versus federal power make up a substantial portion of the...
The recent philosdphical shift of the Supreme Court toward a more restrained or conservative appro...
We attempt to articulate a vision of federalism, particularly the Rehnquist version of federalism. ...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
This article broadly examines the conservative Rehnquist Court\u27s federalism doctrines and, in doi...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.This essay is part of a symposium on a series o...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...