With this event – a Symposium on Abner Greene’s Against Obligation2 and Michael Seidman’s On Constitutional Disobedience3 – we continue our Boston University Law Review series of symposia on significant recent books in law. The distinctive format is to pick two books that join issue on an important topic, to invite the author of each book to write an essay on the other book, and to invite several Boston University School of Law faculty members to write an essay on one or both books
Constitutional Law: A Contemporary Approach (2d ed. 2011) is a textbook written by Professors Gregor...
This third volume about legal interpretation focuses on the interpretation of a constitution, most s...
This symposium contribution critically examines Louis Seidman’s book Constitutional Disobedience (...
With this event – a Symposium on Abner Greene’s Against Obligation2 and Michael Seidman’s On Constit...
I am truly delighted that Boston University School of Law is hosting a conference on Abner Greene’s ...
In his provocative, courageous, and original new book, Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of ...
The central claim of Abner Greene’s Against Obligation appears to be that the federal government sho...
With this event – A Symposium on Jack Balkin’s Living Originalism and David Strauss’s The Living Con...
This work can be used as a supplement in law school constitutional law courses, or as a text for a c...
AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, Volumes I and II, combines cases, decisions, and authorial commentary t...
In his 1986 Yale Law Journal article, Robert Cover wrote of an explosion of legal scholarship placin...
Constitutional interpretation is an issue which has come under considerable scrutiny in the USA, in ...
What is the nature of the US Constitution? How ought it to be interpreted? Ronald Dworkin famously a...
In these remarks I shall take issue with the theme sounded byseveral other scholars in this Symposiu...
Constitutional Law is “tough law.” It is tough to master – tough to teach and tough to learn. Ther...
Constitutional Law: A Contemporary Approach (2d ed. 2011) is a textbook written by Professors Gregor...
This third volume about legal interpretation focuses on the interpretation of a constitution, most s...
This symposium contribution critically examines Louis Seidman’s book Constitutional Disobedience (...
With this event – a Symposium on Abner Greene’s Against Obligation2 and Michael Seidman’s On Constit...
I am truly delighted that Boston University School of Law is hosting a conference on Abner Greene’s ...
In his provocative, courageous, and original new book, Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of ...
The central claim of Abner Greene’s Against Obligation appears to be that the federal government sho...
With this event – A Symposium on Jack Balkin’s Living Originalism and David Strauss’s The Living Con...
This work can be used as a supplement in law school constitutional law courses, or as a text for a c...
AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, Volumes I and II, combines cases, decisions, and authorial commentary t...
In his 1986 Yale Law Journal article, Robert Cover wrote of an explosion of legal scholarship placin...
Constitutional interpretation is an issue which has come under considerable scrutiny in the USA, in ...
What is the nature of the US Constitution? How ought it to be interpreted? Ronald Dworkin famously a...
In these remarks I shall take issue with the theme sounded byseveral other scholars in this Symposiu...
Constitutional Law is “tough law.” It is tough to master – tough to teach and tough to learn. Ther...
Constitutional Law: A Contemporary Approach (2d ed. 2011) is a textbook written by Professors Gregor...
This third volume about legal interpretation focuses on the interpretation of a constitution, most s...
This symposium contribution critically examines Louis Seidman’s book Constitutional Disobedience (...