Sometimes a constitutional right to do a particular thing is accompanied by a right not to do that thing. The First Amendment, for example, guarantees both the right to speak and the right not to speak. This Article asks whether the Second Amendment should likewise be read to encompass both the right to keep or bear arms for self-defense and the inverse right to protect oneself by avoiding them, and what practical implications, if any, the latter right would have. The Article concludes - albeit with some important qualifications - that a right not to keep or bear arms is implied by what the Supreme Court has called the “core” and “central component” of the Second Amendment: self-defense, especially in the home. Recognizing such a right migh...
For many years, the Second Amendment was politely ignored, or summarily dismissed, by America\u27s l...
In District of Columbia v. Heller the Supreme Court held that individuals have a constitutional righ...
This Article contextualizes Professor Nicholas Johnson’s argument that a robust right to arms is ess...
Sometimes a constitutional right to do a particular thing is accompanied by a right not to do that t...
This Article sheds light on a major constitutional question opened up by the United States Supreme C...
This Article sheds light on a major constitutional question opened up by the United States Supreme C...
In District of Columbia v. Heller, the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment guarantees a per...
Most discussions of the right to bear arms-however superficial-begin by noting the specific language...
One of the purposes of this Article will be to sketch out at least some of the very substantial limi...
Traditionally, the debate over the individual right to possess firearms has focused on the origins a...
In popular and professional discourse, debate about the right to keep and bear arms most often revol...
This Article focuses on the case of the Second Amendment right to bear arms and gun control to exami...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent Second Amendment decision, District of Columbia v. Heller asserts that...
Armed protest has long been a tool of American political groups. Neo-Nazis, socialists, fascists, an...
This Article contextualizes Professor Nicholas Johnson’s argument that arobust right to arms is esse...
For many years, the Second Amendment was politely ignored, or summarily dismissed, by America\u27s l...
In District of Columbia v. Heller the Supreme Court held that individuals have a constitutional righ...
This Article contextualizes Professor Nicholas Johnson’s argument that a robust right to arms is ess...
Sometimes a constitutional right to do a particular thing is accompanied by a right not to do that t...
This Article sheds light on a major constitutional question opened up by the United States Supreme C...
This Article sheds light on a major constitutional question opened up by the United States Supreme C...
In District of Columbia v. Heller, the Supreme Court held that the Second Amendment guarantees a per...
Most discussions of the right to bear arms-however superficial-begin by noting the specific language...
One of the purposes of this Article will be to sketch out at least some of the very substantial limi...
Traditionally, the debate over the individual right to possess firearms has focused on the origins a...
In popular and professional discourse, debate about the right to keep and bear arms most often revol...
This Article focuses on the case of the Second Amendment right to bear arms and gun control to exami...
The Supreme Court\u27s recent Second Amendment decision, District of Columbia v. Heller asserts that...
Armed protest has long been a tool of American political groups. Neo-Nazis, socialists, fascists, an...
This Article contextualizes Professor Nicholas Johnson’s argument that arobust right to arms is esse...
For many years, the Second Amendment was politely ignored, or summarily dismissed, by America\u27s l...
In District of Columbia v. Heller the Supreme Court held that individuals have a constitutional righ...
This Article contextualizes Professor Nicholas Johnson’s argument that a robust right to arms is ess...