Some judges are less ambitious than others; they have minimalist tendencies. Minimalists are unambitious along two dimensions. First, they seek to rule narrowly rather than broadly. In a single case, they do not wish to resolve other, related problems that might have relevant differences. They are willing to live with the costs and burdens of uncertainty, which they tend to prefer to the risks of premature resolution of difficult issues. Second, minimalists seek to rule shallowly rather than deeply, in the sense that they favor arguments that do not take a stand on the foundational debates in law and politics. They prefer incompletely theorized agreements, by which diverse people, from their different perspectives, can unite behind modest r...
Many prominent jurists and scholars including those with outlooks as diverse as Chief Justice John R...
Cass Sunstein has long argued that judicial minimalism promotes democracy. According to Sunstein’s v...
This brief essay, a reply to a forthcoming essay by Radicals in Robes by Saikrishna Prakash in the C...
Some judges are less ambitious than others; they have minimalist tendencies. Minimalists are unambit...
Many judges are minimalists. They favor rulings that are narrow, in the sense that they govern only ...
Much of Justice Sandra Day O\u27Connor\u27s work on the Supreme Court embodies a commitment to judic...
When John Roberts became Chief Justice of the United States more than a decade ago, commenters frequ...
Judicial minimalism is an account of how judges should, and sometimes do, decide the cases before th...
In this article, which has been published in slightly revised form at 100 Colum. L. Rev. 1454 (2000)...
article published in law reviewThe main burden of Professor Perry's paper is to demonstrate that an ...
Whatever the merits of minimalism in constitutional adjudication, this Essay argues that in another ...
This Comment examines the conflicting demands on American courts to safeguard the will of the legisl...
Proponents of judicial minimalism argue that courts should issue narrow rulings that address only th...
Minimalism is a theory, of increasing popularity in the United States in recent decades, that requir...
The diverse theories of constitutional interpretation in the United States share one strong common p...
Many prominent jurists and scholars including those with outlooks as diverse as Chief Justice John R...
Cass Sunstein has long argued that judicial minimalism promotes democracy. According to Sunstein’s v...
This brief essay, a reply to a forthcoming essay by Radicals in Robes by Saikrishna Prakash in the C...
Some judges are less ambitious than others; they have minimalist tendencies. Minimalists are unambit...
Many judges are minimalists. They favor rulings that are narrow, in the sense that they govern only ...
Much of Justice Sandra Day O\u27Connor\u27s work on the Supreme Court embodies a commitment to judic...
When John Roberts became Chief Justice of the United States more than a decade ago, commenters frequ...
Judicial minimalism is an account of how judges should, and sometimes do, decide the cases before th...
In this article, which has been published in slightly revised form at 100 Colum. L. Rev. 1454 (2000)...
article published in law reviewThe main burden of Professor Perry's paper is to demonstrate that an ...
Whatever the merits of minimalism in constitutional adjudication, this Essay argues that in another ...
This Comment examines the conflicting demands on American courts to safeguard the will of the legisl...
Proponents of judicial minimalism argue that courts should issue narrow rulings that address only th...
Minimalism is a theory, of increasing popularity in the United States in recent decades, that requir...
The diverse theories of constitutional interpretation in the United States share one strong common p...
Many prominent jurists and scholars including those with outlooks as diverse as Chief Justice John R...
Cass Sunstein has long argued that judicial minimalism promotes democracy. According to Sunstein’s v...
This brief essay, a reply to a forthcoming essay by Radicals in Robes by Saikrishna Prakash in the C...