This article addresses the intentions of the framers with regard to governmental participation in and control of business activity. This topic is particularly timely today as the U.S. defends its international position and considers the relevance of economic regulation enacted as long ago as the late 19th century. We review what worked in the past and consider whether the same solutions can work in the future. As America is governed by the Constitution, we argue that the framers would have chosen the preservation of our economic security and therefore would have disapproved of the current overregulated business environment on pragmatic grounds
This article shows how the norm supporting governmental action to protect and foster competitive mar...
Historically, the Supreme Court has followed one or another extreme view of the constitutionality of...
Living Constitution ideas are most often associated with individual-rights guarantees like equal p...
The United States of America is well-known (and occasionally well-liked or loathed) as the world\u27...
One issue that permeated Gilded Age politics asks to what extent the United States Constitution plac...
Numerous scholars, as well as the conservative justices on the Roberts Court, are market fundamental...
This article applies the method of text and principle to an important problem in constitutional inte...
This Article examines the subject of economic rights under the Constitution and the role that the Ju...
Some scholars have argued that the Framers of the U.S. Constitution did not have a common set of vie...
In this Article, the authors develop an economic theory of the constitutional amendment process unde...
Section I of this Article presents a positive account of the Constitution based on descriptive claim...
In this Article, the authors develop an economic theory of the constitutional amendment process unde...
Constitutions matter for economic performance to the extent that they promote sta-bility, accountabi...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part I provides background on the historical development of con...
Employing a straightforward textual reading of the Commerce Clause, which, unlike various other cons...
This article shows how the norm supporting governmental action to protect and foster competitive mar...
Historically, the Supreme Court has followed one or another extreme view of the constitutionality of...
Living Constitution ideas are most often associated with individual-rights guarantees like equal p...
The United States of America is well-known (and occasionally well-liked or loathed) as the world\u27...
One issue that permeated Gilded Age politics asks to what extent the United States Constitution plac...
Numerous scholars, as well as the conservative justices on the Roberts Court, are market fundamental...
This article applies the method of text and principle to an important problem in constitutional inte...
This Article examines the subject of economic rights under the Constitution and the role that the Ju...
Some scholars have argued that the Framers of the U.S. Constitution did not have a common set of vie...
In this Article, the authors develop an economic theory of the constitutional amendment process unde...
Section I of this Article presents a positive account of the Constitution based on descriptive claim...
In this Article, the authors develop an economic theory of the constitutional amendment process unde...
Constitutions matter for economic performance to the extent that they promote sta-bility, accountabi...
This Article proceeds in four parts. Part I provides background on the historical development of con...
Employing a straightforward textual reading of the Commerce Clause, which, unlike various other cons...
This article shows how the norm supporting governmental action to protect and foster competitive mar...
Historically, the Supreme Court has followed one or another extreme view of the constitutionality of...
Living Constitution ideas are most often associated with individual-rights guarantees like equal p...