It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretation has become increasingly textualist in character - that is, more oriented to statutory language and the assertedly objective meaning of statutory text than to the collective subjective intent behind the legislation. The following excerpt is reprinted with permission of Stanford Law Review, 559 Nathan Abbott Way, Palo Alto, CA 94035, The confounding Common Law Originalism in Recent Supreme Court Satutory Interpretation: Implications for the Legislative History Debate and Beyond, (excerpt including tables), Jane Schactoer, Vol. 50, No. 1, 1998. Reproduced by permission of the publisher via Copyright Clearance Center, Inc. A complete an...
A key doctrinal debate in statutory interpretation today revolves around the claim that courts shoul...
Justice Neil Gorsuch’s approach to textualism, which this Note will call “muscular textualism,” is u...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...
It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretat...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
This Article is the first in-depth empirical and doctrinal analysis of differences in statutory inte...
The last decade has been a remarkable one for statutory interpretation. For most of our history, Ame...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This Article offers the first close study of statutory interpretation in several state courts of las...
Scholars and judges have long disagreed on whether courts of appeals construing statutes ought to ad...
The vast majority of statutory interpretation cases are resolved by the federal courts of appeals, n...
It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all text...
It is by now axiomatic to note that textualism has won the statutory interpretation wars. But contra...
The author analyzed all the U.S. Supreme Court cases and all the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals case...
A key doctrinal debate in statutory interpretation today revolves around the claim that courts shoul...
Justice Neil Gorsuch’s approach to textualism, which this Note will call “muscular textualism,” is u...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...
It is common, even mundane, to observe that the Supreme Court\u27s approach to statutory interpretat...
This Article seeks to shed light on a little-noticed trend in recent U.S. Supreme Court statutory in...
This Article is the first in-depth empirical and doctrinal analysis of differences in statutory inte...
The last decade has been a remarkable one for statutory interpretation. For most of our history, Ame...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This Article offers the first close study of statutory interpretation in several state courts of las...
Scholars and judges have long disagreed on whether courts of appeals construing statutes ought to ad...
The vast majority of statutory interpretation cases are resolved by the federal courts of appeals, n...
It has become standard among statutory interpretation commentators to declare that, “We are all text...
It is by now axiomatic to note that textualism has won the statutory interpretation wars. But contra...
The author analyzed all the U.S. Supreme Court cases and all the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals case...
A key doctrinal debate in statutory interpretation today revolves around the claim that courts shoul...
Justice Neil Gorsuch’s approach to textualism, which this Note will call “muscular textualism,” is u...
Amidst the whirl of commentary about how the U.S. Supreme Court has become increasingly textualist a...