This article is adapted from a talk Professor Larson gave at Pepperdine’s symposium on federal preemption of state tort law - the problem of medical drugs and devices. Professor Larson begins with a discussion of the Constitutional Convention and James Madison’s role in the creation of the U.S. Constitution. He relates how fifteen resolutions, developed by Madison and the other Virginia delegates, became known as the Virginia Plan, and served as the foundation for the Constitution. Professor Larson continues by examining Madison’s notes of the Convention. Specifically he shares what the notes relate about the deliberations at the Convention regarding the national preemption of state laws. Fixing the proper balance between state and national...
In this article, the author distills the essence of the federalists\u27 enumeration of state powers ...
The Constitutional Convention of 1787 forged a new nation, but it’s only recently that the full pict...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...
Since the nineteenth century, Americans have worked consistently to liberate their national governme...
In 1787, the American union was in disarray. The incompatible demands of the separate states threate...
The American Constitution is exceptionally stable. Americans have proposed and ratified only one nat...
The United States has experimented with several different constitutions for adding states. Of all of...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
The average American who thinks of our Federal Document only in terms of the Philadelphia Convention...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...
The American Constitution is exceptionally stable. Americans have proposed and ratified only one nat...
There is nothing new in the world except the history you do not know. Harry S. Truman 33d President...
In this article, the author distills the essence of the federalists\u27 enumeration of state powers ...
The Constitutional Convention of 1787 forged a new nation, but it’s only recently that the full pict...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...
Since the nineteenth century, Americans have worked consistently to liberate their national governme...
In 1787, the American union was in disarray. The incompatible demands of the separate states threate...
The American Constitution is exceptionally stable. Americans have proposed and ratified only one nat...
The United States has experimented with several different constitutions for adding states. Of all of...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
The average American who thinks of our Federal Document only in terms of the Philadelphia Convention...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...
The American Constitution is exceptionally stable. Americans have proposed and ratified only one nat...
There is nothing new in the world except the history you do not know. Harry S. Truman 33d President...
In this article, the author distills the essence of the federalists\u27 enumeration of state powers ...
The Constitutional Convention of 1787 forged a new nation, but it’s only recently that the full pict...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...