Any history of the controversy over President Franklin D. Roosevelt\u27s Court-packing plan sets out to answer three principal questions. The first is how best to tell what I will call the political story: how to understand the political trajectory of the Plan from its initial conceptualization to its ultimate failure. The second is how best to tell what I will call the legal story: how to understand the constitutional landscape that confronted New Deal reformers, how they negotiated it, and how and in what respects the Supreme Court transformed that body of constitutional law during the Great Depression. The third is how to specify the relationship between these two stories. What effect, if any, did the events recounted in the political st...
In this Article, I begin by laying a basic theoretical foundation for understanding how language cho...
This study evolves around an attempt of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to induce the Congress to pa...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1937 Court-packing bill would have permitted him to appoint six ad...
Any history of the controversy over President Franklin D. Roosevelt\u27s Court-packing plan sets out...
This Article presents a chronological, narrative account of Jackson\u27s participation in the court ...
Throughout the history of the United States, the president has often quarreled with the Supreme Cour...
The story of Franklin D. Roosevelt\u27s Court-packing plan is a twice-told tale. 1 Every history of ...
When Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., died in 1935, he left the bulk of his estate to the United ...
Abstract. President Roosevelt’s attempt to add as many as six additional justices to the Supreme Cou...
Before his appointment to the Supreme Court, Justice Robert H. Jackson played a highly visible role ...
This book challenges the prevailing account of the Supreme Court of the New Deal era, which holds th...
This article compares two legislative initiatives of President F.D. Roosevelt with the aim of findin...
This essay, prepared for the Notre Dame Law Review\u27s Symposium, “The American Congress: Legal Imp...
Few legal scholars would dispute the constitutional, historical, and political importance of the eve...
By the author of acclaimed books on the bitter clashes between Jefferson and Chief Justice Marshall ...
In this Article, I begin by laying a basic theoretical foundation for understanding how language cho...
This study evolves around an attempt of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to induce the Congress to pa...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1937 Court-packing bill would have permitted him to appoint six ad...
Any history of the controversy over President Franklin D. Roosevelt\u27s Court-packing plan sets out...
This Article presents a chronological, narrative account of Jackson\u27s participation in the court ...
Throughout the history of the United States, the president has often quarreled with the Supreme Cour...
The story of Franklin D. Roosevelt\u27s Court-packing plan is a twice-told tale. 1 Every history of ...
When Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., died in 1935, he left the bulk of his estate to the United ...
Abstract. President Roosevelt’s attempt to add as many as six additional justices to the Supreme Cou...
Before his appointment to the Supreme Court, Justice Robert H. Jackson played a highly visible role ...
This book challenges the prevailing account of the Supreme Court of the New Deal era, which holds th...
This article compares two legislative initiatives of President F.D. Roosevelt with the aim of findin...
This essay, prepared for the Notre Dame Law Review\u27s Symposium, “The American Congress: Legal Imp...
Few legal scholars would dispute the constitutional, historical, and political importance of the eve...
By the author of acclaimed books on the bitter clashes between Jefferson and Chief Justice Marshall ...
In this Article, I begin by laying a basic theoretical foundation for understanding how language cho...
This study evolves around an attempt of President Franklin D. Roosevelt to induce the Congress to pa...
President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s 1937 Court-packing bill would have permitted him to appoint six ad...