Virtually all constitutional scholars agree, and the Supreme Court has uniformly held, that our entire system of constitutional democracy is premised in important part on the dictate of judicial review, i.e., the power of the judiciary to exercise the final say as to the meaning of the countermajoritarian Constitution’s provisions. Absent judicial review, the fundamental speed bumps to tyranny that the Framers so carefully inserted into our political structure would be rendered all but useless at best and a fraud on the electorate at worst. Yet puzzlingly, most of the very same scholars and judges assume that the very political branches that the Constitution is designed to restrain will fully control the remedies to be issued. Thus, all the...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Judicial review has long been characterized by constitutional scholars as countermajoritarian and an...
Judicial supremacy is the new judicial review. From the time Alexander Bickel introduced the term c...
Most observers of constitutional adjudication believe that it works in an all-or-nothing way. On thi...
Courts frequently withhold remedies for meritorious assertions of constitutional right. The practice...
This Article analyzes the doctrinal instruments federal courts use to allocate scarce adjudicative r...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
Most observers of constitutional adjudication believe that it works in an all-or-nothing way. On thi...
There has been continual conflict between the legislative and judicial branches regarding the author...
May courts review and strike down constitutional amendments that undermine constitutionalism? In th...
The “popular constitutionalism” movement has revived the debate over judicial review. Popular consti...
Many constitutional scholars are obsessed with judicial review and the many questions surrounding it...
One of the judiciary\u27s self-imposed limits on the power of judicial review is the presumption of ...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Judicial review has long been characterized by constitutional scholars as countermajoritarian and an...
Judicial supremacy is the new judicial review. From the time Alexander Bickel introduced the term c...
Most observers of constitutional adjudication believe that it works in an all-or-nothing way. On thi...
Courts frequently withhold remedies for meritorious assertions of constitutional right. The practice...
This Article analyzes the doctrinal instruments federal courts use to allocate scarce adjudicative r...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
American constitutional theory faces a dilemma. The United States Supreme Court has decided a large ...
Most observers of constitutional adjudication believe that it works in an all-or-nothing way. On thi...
There has been continual conflict between the legislative and judicial branches regarding the author...
May courts review and strike down constitutional amendments that undermine constitutionalism? In th...
The “popular constitutionalism” movement has revived the debate over judicial review. Popular consti...
Many constitutional scholars are obsessed with judicial review and the many questions surrounding it...
One of the judiciary\u27s self-imposed limits on the power of judicial review is the presumption of ...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Judicial review has long been characterized by constitutional scholars as countermajoritarian and an...