Scholars have long debated the separation of powers question of what judicial power federal courts have under Article III of the Constitution in the enterprise of interpreting federal statutes. Specifically, scholars have debated whether, in light of Founding-era English and state court judicial practice, the judicial power of the United States should be understood as a power to interpret statutes dynamically or as faithful agents of Congress. This Article argues that the question of how courts should interpret federal statutes is one not only of separation of powers but of federalism as well. State courts have a vital and often independent role in the American constitutional structure in interpreting federal statutes. In the late eighteent...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This symposium examines the authority of Congress to shape the jurisdictional boundaries and remedia...
In a series of groundbreaking articles published over the past fifteen years, James Gardner has led ...
Scholars have long debated the separation of powers question of what judicial power federal courts h...
This Article addresses a problem that potentially arises whenever a federal court encounters a state...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
Federal laws that regulate state institutions give rise to what the Supreme Court has described as t...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for a constitutional delegation ...
In the American constitutional tradition, federalism is commonly understood as a mechanism designed ...
What understanding of the \u27judicial Power would the Founders and their immediate successors poss...
The cases discussed herein mostly surfaced in the regulatory era of the latter half of the nineteent...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Today, it is widely accepted that the Constitution authorizes courts to review and invalidate state ...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
Recent legislation has reinvigorated the scholarly debate over the proper relationship between Congr...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This symposium examines the authority of Congress to shape the jurisdictional boundaries and remedia...
In a series of groundbreaking articles published over the past fifteen years, James Gardner has led ...
Scholars have long debated the separation of powers question of what judicial power federal courts h...
This Article addresses a problem that potentially arises whenever a federal court encounters a state...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
Federal laws that regulate state institutions give rise to what the Supreme Court has described as t...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for a constitutional delegation ...
In the American constitutional tradition, federalism is commonly understood as a mechanism designed ...
What understanding of the \u27judicial Power would the Founders and their immediate successors poss...
The cases discussed herein mostly surfaced in the regulatory era of the latter half of the nineteent...
Although the Constitution vests the Judicial Power of the United States in the Supreme Court and i...
Today, it is widely accepted that the Constitution authorizes courts to review and invalidate state ...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
Recent legislation has reinvigorated the scholarly debate over the proper relationship between Congr...
This Article examines the methods of statutory interpretation used by the lower federal courts, espe...
This symposium examines the authority of Congress to shape the jurisdictional boundaries and remedia...
In a series of groundbreaking articles published over the past fifteen years, James Gardner has led ...