Critics of the administrative state who would revive the nondelegation doctrine and embrace the unitary theory of executive power often assume that each branch’s powers are capable of precise definition, functionally distinct from the others, and that the formal boundaries between each branch are sacrosanct. This Article situates these critiques in Founding Era and nineteenth century debates about the structure of the Constitution. In the 1780s, the AntiFederalists objected to the Constitution for failing to enumerate a precise taxonomy of each branch’s powers, for failing to specify that each branch’s powers were exclusive, and for failing to make government officials sufficiently accountable to the voting public. The drafters responded th...
The American Constitution creates three branches of government and ensures that there will be suffic...
A snapshot of controversies currently surrounding the President highlights a sobering, even if accep...
As the Constitution of the United States nears its two hundredth anniversary, there is a frenzy of c...
Critics of the administrative state who would revive the nondelegation doctrine and embrace the unit...
During the past quarter century, lawyers have become strangely comfortable with descriptions of our ...
Scholars, philosophers, politicians, and citizens alike have been fascinated, since their first impl...
One of the most significant structural elements of the United States Constitution divides the politi...
The Supreme Court applies the structural provisions of the Constitution by relying on an overarching...
This Article examines the debates of the Founders over the separation of powers doctrine as it relat...
The standard conception of separation of powers presumes three branches with equivalent ambitions of...
The American version of the separation of powers was designed to prevent tyranny (i.e., capricious, ...
Separation of powers is one of least understood doctrines in U.S. law and politics. Underlying a gr...
Today the executive branch is generally seen as the most dangerous branch. Many worry that the execu...
As the Supreme Court returns many critical issues to the states, the structure of state government i...
The separation of powers does not necessarily protect the states from having their law displaced by ...
The American Constitution creates three branches of government and ensures that there will be suffic...
A snapshot of controversies currently surrounding the President highlights a sobering, even if accep...
As the Constitution of the United States nears its two hundredth anniversary, there is a frenzy of c...
Critics of the administrative state who would revive the nondelegation doctrine and embrace the unit...
During the past quarter century, lawyers have become strangely comfortable with descriptions of our ...
Scholars, philosophers, politicians, and citizens alike have been fascinated, since their first impl...
One of the most significant structural elements of the United States Constitution divides the politi...
The Supreme Court applies the structural provisions of the Constitution by relying on an overarching...
This Article examines the debates of the Founders over the separation of powers doctrine as it relat...
The standard conception of separation of powers presumes three branches with equivalent ambitions of...
The American version of the separation of powers was designed to prevent tyranny (i.e., capricious, ...
Separation of powers is one of least understood doctrines in U.S. law and politics. Underlying a gr...
Today the executive branch is generally seen as the most dangerous branch. Many worry that the execu...
As the Supreme Court returns many critical issues to the states, the structure of state government i...
The separation of powers does not necessarily protect the states from having their law displaced by ...
The American Constitution creates three branches of government and ensures that there will be suffic...
A snapshot of controversies currently surrounding the President highlights a sobering, even if accep...
As the Constitution of the United States nears its two hundredth anniversary, there is a frenzy of c...