In “Corporate Personhood and Constitutional Rights in the US,” I will chronicle the astonishing story of one of the most successful yet least well-known civil rights movements in American history: the two-centuries long battle for constitutional rights for corporations. Although never oppressed like women and minorities, business corporations too have fought to win equal rights under the Constitution—and today have nearly all the same rights as ordinary people. I will show how recent controversies in the US over the extension of religious and political rights to corporations reflect a longstanding effort to make corporations “people” under the law. The corporate rights movement, led by the most powerful and influential corporations in the e...
Business corporations are statutory creations, recognizably modern only from the end of the nineteen...
interpreted to have ruled that corporations were “persons”—before women were considered persons unde...
This Article, written for a symposium celebrating the work of Professor Margaret Blair, examines how...
This year is the 150th anniversary of the Fourteenth Amendment and provides an opportune moment to r...
Adam Winkler’s book We the Corporations: How American Businesses Won Their Civil Rights is an impres...
Over the course of the past few decades, constitutional rights normally given to natural persons hav...
No case in the Supreme Court’s last term was more controversial than Citizens United v. Federal Elec...
This Article engages the two hundred year history of corporate constitutional rights jurisprudence t...
Blog post, “How Did Corporations Get Constitutional Rights?“ discusses politics, theology and the la...
For two centuries now, jurists and corporate scholars have struggled with creating a singular, globa...
As Americans celebrate the bicentennial of the Bill of Rights, corporations increasingly are invokin...
The Supreme Court has recently decided some of the most important and controversial cases involving ...
Why is a corporation a “person” for purposes of the Constitution? This old question has become new a...
This article explores the interdependence of the discourse of corporate rights and the law of corpor...
My objective here is to provide a little historical background on business corporations and their pl...
Business corporations are statutory creations, recognizably modern only from the end of the nineteen...
interpreted to have ruled that corporations were “persons”—before women were considered persons unde...
This Article, written for a symposium celebrating the work of Professor Margaret Blair, examines how...
This year is the 150th anniversary of the Fourteenth Amendment and provides an opportune moment to r...
Adam Winkler’s book We the Corporations: How American Businesses Won Their Civil Rights is an impres...
Over the course of the past few decades, constitutional rights normally given to natural persons hav...
No case in the Supreme Court’s last term was more controversial than Citizens United v. Federal Elec...
This Article engages the two hundred year history of corporate constitutional rights jurisprudence t...
Blog post, “How Did Corporations Get Constitutional Rights?“ discusses politics, theology and the la...
For two centuries now, jurists and corporate scholars have struggled with creating a singular, globa...
As Americans celebrate the bicentennial of the Bill of Rights, corporations increasingly are invokin...
The Supreme Court has recently decided some of the most important and controversial cases involving ...
Why is a corporation a “person” for purposes of the Constitution? This old question has become new a...
This article explores the interdependence of the discourse of corporate rights and the law of corpor...
My objective here is to provide a little historical background on business corporations and their pl...
Business corporations are statutory creations, recognizably modern only from the end of the nineteen...
interpreted to have ruled that corporations were “persons”—before women were considered persons unde...
This Article, written for a symposium celebrating the work of Professor Margaret Blair, examines how...