Legal scholars often contend that prominent Supreme Court opinions interpret the Constitution in a manner that invalidates outliers—measures found in only a small number of states, rather than spread throughout the nation. Despite the term\u27s ubiquity in constitutional conversation, law professors have dedicated scant attention to exploring either its conceptual underpinnings or its conceptual borders. This paucity of scholarly attention is regrettable because the term has become enshrouded in analytical confusion, which severely diminishes its utility and instills deep misperceptions about the Supreme Court\u27s role in issuing outlier-suppressing opinions. This Article—the first extended effort to cast a critical eye on the notion of co...
Conventional theories of constitutional design suggest that frequent formal amendment of a constitut...
Virtually all constitutional scholars agree, and the Supreme Court has uniformly held, that our enti...
In this Article, Professor Parrish explores the legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s use of for...
Legal scholars often contend that prominent Supreme Court opinions interpret the Constitution in a m...
In recent years, many scholars have suggested that constitutional scholarship pays too much attentio...
This paper examines several different theories surrounding judicial review and finds many of these t...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Modem constitutional adjudication is often structured as a conflict between individual rights and st...
The ongoing debates over the legitimacy of judicial review-the power of courts to strike down uncons...
Students of constitutional law tend to suspect pretty early on that the Constitution simply means wh...
The power of judicial review of federal statutes in American constitutional history has the mystique...
Judicial supremacy is the new judicial review. From the time Alexander Bickel introduced the term c...
In recent years, the countermajoritarian difficulty has split into two. According to its traditiona...
“[W]e must never forget, that it is a constitution we are expounding.” If there was such a danger wh...
Last term, the Supreme Court issued its first major Second Amendment decision in more than a decade,...
Conventional theories of constitutional design suggest that frequent formal amendment of a constitut...
Virtually all constitutional scholars agree, and the Supreme Court has uniformly held, that our enti...
In this Article, Professor Parrish explores the legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s use of for...
Legal scholars often contend that prominent Supreme Court opinions interpret the Constitution in a m...
In recent years, many scholars have suggested that constitutional scholarship pays too much attentio...
This paper examines several different theories surrounding judicial review and finds many of these t...
Most debate about the power of judicial review proceeds as if courts primarily invoke the Constituti...
Modem constitutional adjudication is often structured as a conflict between individual rights and st...
The ongoing debates over the legitimacy of judicial review-the power of courts to strike down uncons...
Students of constitutional law tend to suspect pretty early on that the Constitution simply means wh...
The power of judicial review of federal statutes in American constitutional history has the mystique...
Judicial supremacy is the new judicial review. From the time Alexander Bickel introduced the term c...
In recent years, the countermajoritarian difficulty has split into two. According to its traditiona...
“[W]e must never forget, that it is a constitution we are expounding.” If there was such a danger wh...
Last term, the Supreme Court issued its first major Second Amendment decision in more than a decade,...
Conventional theories of constitutional design suggest that frequent formal amendment of a constitut...
Virtually all constitutional scholars agree, and the Supreme Court has uniformly held, that our enti...
In this Article, Professor Parrish explores the legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s use of for...