When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resolve legal disputes by examining, interpreting, and applying prior positive law such as text and precedent. This Article argues that three cases decided by the Roberts Court – Gonzales v. Carhart, District of Columbia v. Heller, and Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission – exemplify the Supreme Court’s propensity for disregarding prior positive law when deciding cases. The Author contends that the Roberts Court, quite possibly like all the Supreme Courts before it, is not a “court” at all because it does not take prior law seriously and does not transparently provide true justifications for its conclusions
Part I of this Article asserts that the Supreme Court pays little attention to precedent in federal ...
Postconviction habeas comprises about 7 percent of federal district courts\u27 dockets and between 8...
This Article advances a provocative and ironic thesis concerning the incentives of the Roberts Court...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...
In this Article we reveal a dual dilemma, both material and institutional, that the Supreme Court in...
This Article, prepared for the Case Western Reserve Law Review symposium on “Access to the Courts in...
One recurring theme of the early Roberts Court\u27s jurisprudence to date is its resistance to facia...
This Article explores how the Roberts Court has negotiated the choice between as-applied and facial ...
The link between courts and the public is the written word. With rare exceptions, it is through judi...
This Article develops an approach to constructing the meaning of prior court cases that is more help...
This Article arises out of a symposium exploring the connection between the political question doctr...
This article looks at how Chevron deference has fared at the Supreme Court since John G. Roberts bec...
Since 2011 the Roberts Court has decided six personal jurisdiction cases that impose significant new...
We are used to thinking that facts shape legal outcomes, but sometimes the Supreme Court wants nothi...
This paper is an empirical analysis of the Supreme Court\u27s recently-ended 2005 term, including ...
Part I of this Article asserts that the Supreme Court pays little attention to precedent in federal ...
Postconviction habeas comprises about 7 percent of federal district courts\u27 dockets and between 8...
This Article advances a provocative and ironic thesis concerning the incentives of the Roberts Court...
When facing a question that the law does not clearly answer, courts are generally obligated to resol...
In this Article we reveal a dual dilemma, both material and institutional, that the Supreme Court in...
This Article, prepared for the Case Western Reserve Law Review symposium on “Access to the Courts in...
One recurring theme of the early Roberts Court\u27s jurisprudence to date is its resistance to facia...
This Article explores how the Roberts Court has negotiated the choice between as-applied and facial ...
The link between courts and the public is the written word. With rare exceptions, it is through judi...
This Article develops an approach to constructing the meaning of prior court cases that is more help...
This Article arises out of a symposium exploring the connection between the political question doctr...
This article looks at how Chevron deference has fared at the Supreme Court since John G. Roberts bec...
Since 2011 the Roberts Court has decided six personal jurisdiction cases that impose significant new...
We are used to thinking that facts shape legal outcomes, but sometimes the Supreme Court wants nothi...
This paper is an empirical analysis of the Supreme Court\u27s recently-ended 2005 term, including ...
Part I of this Article asserts that the Supreme Court pays little attention to precedent in federal ...
Postconviction habeas comprises about 7 percent of federal district courts\u27 dockets and between 8...
This Article advances a provocative and ironic thesis concerning the incentives of the Roberts Court...