This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the link between the individual and the social and political structure—with how they designed the Constitution and, in particular, how they designed the U.S. Senate as a non-majoritarian institution. I mine primary sources to show that although the founders struggled with many disagreements in drafting the Constitution, they shared an amalgam of historically received ideas about human agency derived from both liberal and civic republican traditions. I identify five such ideas and then parse which of them continue to pertain today. I argue that although contemporary and mainstream Western political thought continues to regard individuals’ pursuit o...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article offers an interpretation of the problems addressed by and the eventual purpose of the U...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
The Founders exerted significant energy and passion in formulating the Appointments Clause, which gr...
This essay examines the American Founders’ convictions about government as expressed through key doc...
That an institution of government, like an institution or practice of society, is a growth and not a...
This article re-examines the controversial question of whether the American Founders believed their ...
This article re-examines the controversial question of whether the American Founders believed their ...
In seeking to understand and interpret our written Constitution, judges and scholars have often focu...
I. Introduction II. Constitutional Architecture and Federalism by Consensus … A. The Great Compromis...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article offers an interpretation of the problems addressed by and the eventual purpose of the U...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
This Article links the U.S. founders’ ideas about “human agency”—i.e., their understandings of the l...
The Founders exerted significant energy and passion in formulating the Appointments Clause, which gr...
This essay examines the American Founders’ convictions about government as expressed through key doc...
That an institution of government, like an institution or practice of society, is a growth and not a...
This article re-examines the controversial question of whether the American Founders believed their ...
This article re-examines the controversial question of whether the American Founders believed their ...
In seeking to understand and interpret our written Constitution, judges and scholars have often focu...
I. Introduction II. Constitutional Architecture and Federalism by Consensus … A. The Great Compromis...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article refutes the claim that the Constitution was originally understood to contain a nondeleg...
This article offers an interpretation of the problems addressed by and the eventual purpose of the U...