In his article Parchment and Politics: The Positive Puzzle of Constitutional Commitment, Professor Daryl J. Levinson identifies a variety of public choice mechanisms that lead politically empowered groups to accept constitutional limitations on their political power. In this response, Professor Josh Chafetz argues that Levinson overlooks another set of mechanisms, ones which work not at the level of material interests but rather at the level of political morality. Focusing on an Aristotelian account of political morality—an account that was influential among the Framers of the U.S. Constitution and that remains influential today — Chafetz suggests that at least some of our constitutional commitment can be explained in terms of a...
Is there a moral duty to obey the law? Or more precisely, do citizens of any modern state have a ge...
This book defends political obligation, stating that people are morally obligated to obey the law of...
Most legal scholars and elected officials embrace the popular clich6 that the Constitution is not a...
In his article Parchment and Politics: The Positive Puzzle of Constitutional Commitment, Professor ...
In the United States today, the behavior of the political branches is generally viewed as more damag...
Should there be greater participation by legislators and citizens in constitutional debate, theory, ...
About 37 state constitutions around the world feature non-justiciable thick moral commitments (‘cons...
This paper is divided into three sections. First, I describe the wide plurality of views on issues o...
About 37 state constitutions around the world feature non-justiciable thick moral commitments (‘cons...
In his provocative, courageous, and original new book, Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of ...
The seemingly inexhaustible debate over the proper role of the Supreme Court in constitutional adjud...
This comment to Sanford Levinson\u27s Brandeis lecture at Pepperdine focuses on the role and types o...
This article is part of a symposium issue on Scott Shapiro\u27s book, Legality. It explores the ques...
textThis study seeks to describe and evaluate the Constitution’s implicit normative structure. The ...
Our practices for determining issues of public morality are deeply flawed. We rely too heavily on th...
Is there a moral duty to obey the law? Or more precisely, do citizens of any modern state have a ge...
This book defends political obligation, stating that people are morally obligated to obey the law of...
Most legal scholars and elected officials embrace the popular clich6 that the Constitution is not a...
In his article Parchment and Politics: The Positive Puzzle of Constitutional Commitment, Professor ...
In the United States today, the behavior of the political branches is generally viewed as more damag...
Should there be greater participation by legislators and citizens in constitutional debate, theory, ...
About 37 state constitutions around the world feature non-justiciable thick moral commitments (‘cons...
This paper is divided into three sections. First, I describe the wide plurality of views on issues o...
About 37 state constitutions around the world feature non-justiciable thick moral commitments (‘cons...
In his provocative, courageous, and original new book, Against Obligation: The Multiple Sources of ...
The seemingly inexhaustible debate over the proper role of the Supreme Court in constitutional adjud...
This comment to Sanford Levinson\u27s Brandeis lecture at Pepperdine focuses on the role and types o...
This article is part of a symposium issue on Scott Shapiro\u27s book, Legality. It explores the ques...
textThis study seeks to describe and evaluate the Constitution’s implicit normative structure. The ...
Our practices for determining issues of public morality are deeply flawed. We rely too heavily on th...
Is there a moral duty to obey the law? Or more precisely, do citizens of any modern state have a ge...
This book defends political obligation, stating that people are morally obligated to obey the law of...
Most legal scholars and elected officials embrace the popular clich6 that the Constitution is not a...