There is a longstanding debate in the theory of statutory interpretation over what meaning, if any, can be attributed to the legislature\u27s failure to do something. Issues of legislative inaction often arise in cases where the Supreme Court considers the validity of an administrative or judicial interpretation of a statute and the argument is made that the interpretation must be accepted because Congress has acquiesced in it by not overruling it, has ratified it by reenacting the statute, or at some point was presented with a formal bill or amendment embodying an alternative interpretation and rejected it. The Court has grappled with such arguments since the nineteenth century, oftentimes finding inaction arguments persuasive but other ...
Scholars have long debated the merits of various theories for interpreting statutes. On one side, t...
Part I of this Article provides a framework for understanding the core issues of interbranch power i...
The author analyzed all the U.S. Supreme Court cases and all the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals case...
This month the Supreme Court will hear reargument in Patterson v. McLean Credit Union on the questio...
In its October 1988 issue,1 the Michigan Law Review published a symposium on Patterson v. McLean Cre...
Despite all that has been written about the choice between purposivist, intentionalist, and textuali...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
The Supreme Court has long given its cases interpreting statutes special protection from overruling....
An aspect of the battle over deconstruction is whether resort to legislative intent might help to de...
There are two principal aspects of my thesis. First, it is desirable to consider seriously these leg...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
This Article explores the circumstances under which the federal legislative apparatus may be unable ...
There is an important but chronically overlooked problem in statutory interpretation. Courts frequen...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Statutory interpretation, considered from the perspective of positive political theory, yields a num...
Scholars have long debated the merits of various theories for interpreting statutes. On one side, t...
Part I of this Article provides a framework for understanding the core issues of interbranch power i...
The author analyzed all the U.S. Supreme Court cases and all the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals case...
This month the Supreme Court will hear reargument in Patterson v. McLean Credit Union on the questio...
In its October 1988 issue,1 the Michigan Law Review published a symposium on Patterson v. McLean Cre...
Despite all that has been written about the choice between purposivist, intentionalist, and textuali...
We have a law of civil procedure, criminal procedure, and administrative procedure, but we have no l...
The Supreme Court has long given its cases interpreting statutes special protection from overruling....
An aspect of the battle over deconstruction is whether resort to legislative intent might help to de...
There are two principal aspects of my thesis. First, it is desirable to consider seriously these leg...
The formalist project in statutory interpretation, as it has defined itself, has been a failure. Tha...
This Article explores the circumstances under which the federal legislative apparatus may be unable ...
There is an important but chronically overlooked problem in statutory interpretation. Courts frequen...
Every lawyer\u27s theory of statutory interpretation carries with it an idea of Congress, and every ...
Statutory interpretation, considered from the perspective of positive political theory, yields a num...
Scholars have long debated the merits of various theories for interpreting statutes. On one side, t...
Part I of this Article provides a framework for understanding the core issues of interbranch power i...
The author analyzed all the U.S. Supreme Court cases and all the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals case...