Against the background of the ECtHR's recent decision in Appleby v UK (a European “counterpart” to the well-known US Supreme Court decision in Marsh v Alabama) the paper addresses, first, the issue of the influence, often perceived as dilemmatic, of human rights norms and constitutional norms on private law. In a second step, then, the paper discusses the promise—and a possible dilemma—of “comparative constitutionalism” as an engine of a more denationalized “constitutional patriotism”: the dilemma that we trade the “closure” of domestic exceptionalism against the new, systemic “closure” of “too much” judicial comity and professionalism, the closure of a new Juristenrecht
The editors of the Maine Law Review have been kind enough to offer me the opportunity to respond to ...
The Second Amendment, like other federal constitutional rights, is a restriction on government power...
Nothing in the United States Constitution is today formally unamendable. Yet it is worth asking whet...
Against the background of the ECtHR's recent decision in Appleby v UK (a European “counterpart” to t...
In this paper I want to address, against the background of the ECtHR’s recent attempt to resolve the...
Part of the Symposium on the State Action Doctrine. Presented to the Section on Constitutional Law a...
When and how should governments be permitted to use private-law mechanisms to manage their public-la...
The greatest challenge for any civilized society is to find the appropriate balance of rights and re...
The rights/freedoms dichotomy tacitly permeates Supreme Court ‘takings\u27 jurisprudence, and it has...
Constitutional rights and private law are on a collision course. Constitutional rights have many con...
Constitutionalism compels and constrains all dimensions of our everyday lives in ways large and smal...
This article examines a dimension of public law which, despite the increased frequency of litigation...
In this article, Professor Michael Kent Curtis examines how laws that shape the distribution of weal...
Constitutional protection of private property is grounded in a conflict between two legal principles...
Professor McAffee reviews substantive due process as the textual basis for modern fundamental rights...
The editors of the Maine Law Review have been kind enough to offer me the opportunity to respond to ...
The Second Amendment, like other federal constitutional rights, is a restriction on government power...
Nothing in the United States Constitution is today formally unamendable. Yet it is worth asking whet...
Against the background of the ECtHR's recent decision in Appleby v UK (a European “counterpart” to t...
In this paper I want to address, against the background of the ECtHR’s recent attempt to resolve the...
Part of the Symposium on the State Action Doctrine. Presented to the Section on Constitutional Law a...
When and how should governments be permitted to use private-law mechanisms to manage their public-la...
The greatest challenge for any civilized society is to find the appropriate balance of rights and re...
The rights/freedoms dichotomy tacitly permeates Supreme Court ‘takings\u27 jurisprudence, and it has...
Constitutional rights and private law are on a collision course. Constitutional rights have many con...
Constitutionalism compels and constrains all dimensions of our everyday lives in ways large and smal...
This article examines a dimension of public law which, despite the increased frequency of litigation...
In this article, Professor Michael Kent Curtis examines how laws that shape the distribution of weal...
Constitutional protection of private property is grounded in a conflict between two legal principles...
Professor McAffee reviews substantive due process as the textual basis for modern fundamental rights...
The editors of the Maine Law Review have been kind enough to offer me the opportunity to respond to ...
The Second Amendment, like other federal constitutional rights, is a restriction on government power...
Nothing in the United States Constitution is today formally unamendable. Yet it is worth asking whet...