An important question of positive and normative legislation theory is what role courts should assume when they interpret statutes (as opposed to the Constitution and the common law). One can imagine the range of roles as a continuum. At one pole is an archeological approach, in which a court\u27s role is to unearth and enforce the original intent or expectations of the legislature that created the statute. Under this approach, statutory interpretation is an effort to discern the original answer put into the statute. At the other pole is a free inquiry approach, in which the court\u27s role is to reach the best result, formally unconstrained (though perhaps influenced or persuaded) by the statute\u27s text and legislative history. These ...
This Article provides a novel solution to the countermajoritarian difficulty in statutory interpreta...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
An important question of positive and normative legislation theory is what role courts should assume...
Statutory interpretation, considered from the perspective of positive political theory, yields a num...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...
The usefulness of legislative history has been brought into question concerning how judges interpret...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
Much of the debate in the recent revival of interest in statutory interpretation centers on whether ...
The debate about statutory interpretation has been affected by the introduction of social choice the...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
The prima-facie understanding of statutory interpretation is that the court has the final word abou...
This article considers theories of “interpretive choice,” which deny that any particular method of i...
Legislative supremacy has long been a shibboleth in discourse about statutory interpretation. So muc...
This Article provides a novel solution to the countermajoritarian difficulty in statutory interpreta...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...
An important question of positive and normative legislation theory is what role courts should assume...
Statutory interpretation, considered from the perspective of positive political theory, yields a num...
In the modern debate over statutory interpretation, scholars frequently talk past one another, argui...
The usefulness of legislative history has been brought into question concerning how judges interpret...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
Much of the debate in the recent revival of interest in statutory interpretation centers on whether ...
The debate about statutory interpretation has been affected by the introduction of social choice the...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
The prima-facie understanding of statutory interpretation is that the court has the final word abou...
This article considers theories of “interpretive choice,” which deny that any particular method of i...
Legislative supremacy has long been a shibboleth in discourse about statutory interpretation. So muc...
This Article provides a novel solution to the countermajoritarian difficulty in statutory interpreta...
How should courts handle interpretive choices, such as when statutory text strongly points to one st...
Many textualists see canons of interpretation as a means to deal with statutory ambiguity, while non...