In 1973, under an Equal Protection Clause challenge, the Supreme Court in San Antonio v. Rodriguez held that education is not a fundamental right implicitly or explicitly found within the U.S. Constitution. The substantive due process jurisprudence of the Court\u27s 2003 term raises serious questions about the legal and theoretical underpinnings of Rodriguez. Lawrence v. Texas stands for a bold, new architecture that the Court may employ in future substantive due process decisions. This Note argues that if the due process analysis forged in Lawrence is followed, the Supreme Court may reconsider its thirty-year-old Rodriguez decision, recognize the non-fundamental liberty interest in a minimally adequate education under the Due Process Claus...
Part of the Education Law Stories, this book chapter tells the story behind San Antonio Independent ...
In Retained by the People, Daniel A. Farber argues for a robust renaissance of Ninth Amendment juris...
It is not often that the U.S. Supreme Court admits that one of its previous decisions, especially on...
In 1973, under an Equal Protection Clause challenge, the Supreme Court in San Antonio v. Rodriguez h...
In Lawrence v. Texas, the Supreme Court abolished the scrutiny regime because it impermissibly inter...
San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez used the scrutiny regime to decide whether there was an Equ...
This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamen...
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protect...
With these words, the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education, unanimously declared that the lo...
Public education is “the most important function of state and local government” and yet not a “funda...
In the Rodriguez decision, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the plaintiffs did not have a right unde...
New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a...
Since the mid-1950s, a sea change in public education has taken place. Public education—a policy con...
Recently, state systems of financing public education have been overturned or seriously threatened b...
This article, however, goes beyond the argument that education is one of the most valuable benefits ...
Part of the Education Law Stories, this book chapter tells the story behind San Antonio Independent ...
In Retained by the People, Daniel A. Farber argues for a robust renaissance of Ninth Amendment juris...
It is not often that the U.S. Supreme Court admits that one of its previous decisions, especially on...
In 1973, under an Equal Protection Clause challenge, the Supreme Court in San Antonio v. Rodriguez h...
In Lawrence v. Texas, the Supreme Court abolished the scrutiny regime because it impermissibly inter...
San Antonio School District v. Rodriguez used the scrutiny regime to decide whether there was an Equ...
This Article argues for a human dignity-based, due process clause analysis to recognize the fundamen...
For decades, the U.S. Supreme Court has left open the question whether the U.S. Constitution protect...
With these words, the Supreme Court in Brown v. Board of Education, unanimously declared that the lo...
Public education is “the most important function of state and local government” and yet not a “funda...
In the Rodriguez decision, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the plaintiffs did not have a right unde...
New litigation has revived one of the most important questions of constitutional law: Is education a...
Since the mid-1950s, a sea change in public education has taken place. Public education—a policy con...
Recently, state systems of financing public education have been overturned or seriously threatened b...
This article, however, goes beyond the argument that education is one of the most valuable benefits ...
Part of the Education Law Stories, this book chapter tells the story behind San Antonio Independent ...
In Retained by the People, Daniel A. Farber argues for a robust renaissance of Ninth Amendment juris...
It is not often that the U.S. Supreme Court admits that one of its previous decisions, especially on...