Continuing a study of the first hundred years of constitutional litigation, Professor Currie explores the decisions of the Taney period respecting the Contract and Commerce Clauses. Though early decisions of the Taney Court seemed to portend a departure from the nationalism of its predecessor, the author argues that the impression was largely misleading. In general, for example, the Court under Taney proved rather sympathetic to contract rights. In Commerce Clause cases, after being badly split, the Court was able to agree on a longlasting formula that acknowledged an implicit limitation on state power, and although in the Taney period the Court never clearly struck down a state law on Commerce Clause grounds, it found other ways to protect...
In the historic case of M\u27Culloch v. Maryland, CHIEF Justice Marshall said, referring to the Fede...
HAND in hand together, Due Process and the Commerce Clause amble across the pages of the United Stat...
One issue that permeated Gilded Age politics asks to what extent the United States Constitution plac...
Continuing a study of the first hundred years of constitutional litigation, Professor Currie explore...
Continuing his critical analysis of the constitutional decisions of the Taney period, Professor Curr...
During the early nineteenth century, the contract clause served as the fundamental source of federal...
Between 1837 and 1852, the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Roger B. Taney was severly divided over...
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress did not have the power to regulate interstate and fore...
Since the drafting of the United States Constitution, the power of both the federal government and t...
The Constitution\u27s original meaning is its meaning to those ratifying the document during a discr...
The Senate hearings considering Elena Kagan’s Supreme Court nomination called new attention to the C...
This diploma thesis aims to analyze the issue of one of the most significant congressional powers fo...
This essay, a contribution to a fall symposium at the Oklahoma City University law school, examines ...
Recent decisions have revealed a growing rift in the Supreme Court on the question of the effect of ...
This Article attempts a reconceptualization of developments in Commerce Clause jurisprudence between...
In the historic case of M\u27Culloch v. Maryland, CHIEF Justice Marshall said, referring to the Fede...
HAND in hand together, Due Process and the Commerce Clause amble across the pages of the United Stat...
One issue that permeated Gilded Age politics asks to what extent the United States Constitution plac...
Continuing a study of the first hundred years of constitutional litigation, Professor Currie explore...
Continuing his critical analysis of the constitutional decisions of the Taney period, Professor Curr...
During the early nineteenth century, the contract clause served as the fundamental source of federal...
Between 1837 and 1852, the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Roger B. Taney was severly divided over...
Under the Articles of Confederation, Congress did not have the power to regulate interstate and fore...
Since the drafting of the United States Constitution, the power of both the federal government and t...
The Constitution\u27s original meaning is its meaning to those ratifying the document during a discr...
The Senate hearings considering Elena Kagan’s Supreme Court nomination called new attention to the C...
This diploma thesis aims to analyze the issue of one of the most significant congressional powers fo...
This essay, a contribution to a fall symposium at the Oklahoma City University law school, examines ...
Recent decisions have revealed a growing rift in the Supreme Court on the question of the effect of ...
This Article attempts a reconceptualization of developments in Commerce Clause jurisprudence between...
In the historic case of M\u27Culloch v. Maryland, CHIEF Justice Marshall said, referring to the Fede...
HAND in hand together, Due Process and the Commerce Clause amble across the pages of the United Stat...
One issue that permeated Gilded Age politics asks to what extent the United States Constitution plac...