This article argues that litigation is largely counterproductive to the development of a coherent and feasible social welfare policy and interferes with the constitutionally-derived separation of powers. It describes the proper role of the courts when evaluating government actions and the proper procedures for doing so. It then discusses several cases brought against the New York State Department of Social Services and local governments, arguing that the courts have abandoned their appropriate role, and using these decisions to illustrate its thesis
The Supreme Court has increasingly considered a particular kind of argument: that it should avoid re...
This Article locates the productive function of litigation loss in social movements. Departing from ...
Following a brief description of the present system of judicial review of social security decisions,...
Part I of the article lays out the major academic criticisms of DeShaney v. Winnebago County Departm...
Three years ago it could be said that the federal courts played virtually no role in shaping the rul...
This article argues that Article I courts can use equitable principles to provide individuals who ha...
The Supreme Court is entering a new era, discarding long-standing legal doctrines to reshape the rel...
In the debate over the use of litigation to make public health policy, proponents and critics of the...
This Essay is an effort to construct a normative basis for a constitutional theory to resist the Sup...
Abstract: The paper investigates litigation as a strategy to advance the social rights of marginali...
In the United States, courts have played a key role in defining socio-economic rights and in enforci...
With the rise of the welfare state, democratic, common law governments undertook a new proactive rol...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
Since the Supreme Court’s widely criticized decision in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of S...
Six decades ago, a group of lawyers sought ways to overturn the racially restrictive covenants that ...
The Supreme Court has increasingly considered a particular kind of argument: that it should avoid re...
This Article locates the productive function of litigation loss in social movements. Departing from ...
Following a brief description of the present system of judicial review of social security decisions,...
Part I of the article lays out the major academic criticisms of DeShaney v. Winnebago County Departm...
Three years ago it could be said that the federal courts played virtually no role in shaping the rul...
This article argues that Article I courts can use equitable principles to provide individuals who ha...
The Supreme Court is entering a new era, discarding long-standing legal doctrines to reshape the rel...
In the debate over the use of litigation to make public health policy, proponents and critics of the...
This Essay is an effort to construct a normative basis for a constitutional theory to resist the Sup...
Abstract: The paper investigates litigation as a strategy to advance the social rights of marginali...
In the United States, courts have played a key role in defining socio-economic rights and in enforci...
With the rise of the welfare state, democratic, common law governments undertook a new proactive rol...
Nowadays, there is no more discredited era in our judicial history than that represented by such cas...
Since the Supreme Court’s widely criticized decision in DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of S...
Six decades ago, a group of lawyers sought ways to overturn the racially restrictive covenants that ...
The Supreme Court has increasingly considered a particular kind of argument: that it should avoid re...
This Article locates the productive function of litigation loss in social movements. Departing from ...
Following a brief description of the present system of judicial review of social security decisions,...