Many commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s New Federalism decisions as excessively formalistic. In this Article, Professor Eid argues that this standard critique is wrong on both a descriptive and normative level. Descriptively, she argues that the standard critique mistakenly downplays the extent to which the New Federalism decisions consider the values that federalism serves, and contends that they employ the same sort of formalism/functionalism blend that is found in the Court\u27s separation of powers jurisprudence. Professor Eid then contends that the standard critique\u27s normative prescription - a case-by-case balancing test that would weigh the federal interest against the burden on state sovereignty - will fail ...
Our manuscript entitled The Foundations of Federalism: An Exchange is occasioned by the Supreme Co...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
We make much of Our Federalism. \u27 The Supreme Court routinely crafts doctrine to further its end...
Many commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s New Federalism decisions as excessively fo...
This paper starts from the proposition that although the Rehnquist Court imposed limits on federal p...
National Federalism best describes the modern allocation of state and federal power, but it is a fe...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for a constitutional delegation ...
This article examines the enduring question of the nature of the American federalism and its suppos...
The conventional wisdom is that the Rehnquist Court has a federalism agenda-restricting the scope of...
Contemporary legal discourse concerning federalism has shifted from the formal to the normative, tha...
The Constitution does not use the words federal or federalism. It gives Congress a set of powers and...
This essay began life as a response to Sotirios Barber’s essay (soon to be a book) entitled “Defendi...
This article explores tensions between the underlying values of federalism that come into conflict w...
In New York v. United States, 505 U.S. 144 (1992), the Court revived state sovereignty as a justic...
Our manuscript entitled The Foundations of Federalism: An Exchange is occasioned by the Supreme Co...
Our manuscript entitled The Foundations of Federalism: An Exchange is occasioned by the Supreme Co...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
We make much of Our Federalism. \u27 The Supreme Court routinely crafts doctrine to further its end...
Many commentators have criticized the Supreme Court\u27s New Federalism decisions as excessively fo...
This paper starts from the proposition that although the Rehnquist Court imposed limits on federal p...
National Federalism best describes the modern allocation of state and federal power, but it is a fe...
Enforcing federalism is most commonly thought to involve the search for a constitutional delegation ...
This article examines the enduring question of the nature of the American federalism and its suppos...
The conventional wisdom is that the Rehnquist Court has a federalism agenda-restricting the scope of...
Contemporary legal discourse concerning federalism has shifted from the formal to the normative, tha...
The Constitution does not use the words federal or federalism. It gives Congress a set of powers and...
This essay began life as a response to Sotirios Barber’s essay (soon to be a book) entitled “Defendi...
This article explores tensions between the underlying values of federalism that come into conflict w...
In New York v. United States, 505 U.S. 144 (1992), the Court revived state sovereignty as a justic...
Our manuscript entitled The Foundations of Federalism: An Exchange is occasioned by the Supreme Co...
Our manuscript entitled The Foundations of Federalism: An Exchange is occasioned by the Supreme Co...
Although a debate continues to rage in the academy and on the Court about the propriety of originali...
We make much of Our Federalism. \u27 The Supreme Court routinely crafts doctrine to further its end...