This Essay examines the methodological upheaval created by the quartet of constitutional election law cases decided during October Term 2007. Prior to this Term, the ascendant analytic approach called for a threshold characterization of the burden on the plaintiff\u27s rights, which characterization determined whether the court would apply strict scrutiny or lax, rational-basis-like review. The characterization was generally formal in nature. But in light of the Supreme Court\u27s latest decisions, it is now open to a lower court adjudicating a First Amendment or Equal Protection challenge to an election law-absent a Supreme Court precedent squarely on point- (1) to engage in unmediated, all-things-considered balancing, focusing either on t...
This timely book is a diverse collection of essays by nationally recognized scholars, politicians, a...
In this Review Essay I explore the rights-structure debate that has captivated the attention of elec...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
This Essay examines the methodological upheaval created by the quartet of constitutional election la...
Election law is experiencing immense change. The Supreme Court’s recent approach to election law cas...
For many years, the dominant view among American election law scholars has been that the U.S. Suprem...
For many years, the dominant view among American election law scholars has been that the U.S. Suprem...
Judges and law professors alike have worried that an avowedly structural approach to constitutional ...
Recent Supreme Court election law jurisprudence reflects an unspoken, pernicious trend. Without iden...
This Article critically examines recent Supreme Court election law jurisprudence, with a particular ...
Voting is simple in the United States, right? The process of voting (organizing, running and tabula...
Modem constitutional adjudication is often structured as a conflict between individual rights and st...
The contributions to this symposium, sponsored by the Association of American Law Schools ( AALS ) S...
Increasingly, state and federal courts are asked to resolve election-related disputes, as candidates...
In Vieth v. Jubelirer, the U.S. Supreme Court seemed poised to offer its definitive position on poli...
This timely book is a diverse collection of essays by nationally recognized scholars, politicians, a...
In this Review Essay I explore the rights-structure debate that has captivated the attention of elec...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...
This Essay examines the methodological upheaval created by the quartet of constitutional election la...
Election law is experiencing immense change. The Supreme Court’s recent approach to election law cas...
For many years, the dominant view among American election law scholars has been that the U.S. Suprem...
For many years, the dominant view among American election law scholars has been that the U.S. Suprem...
Judges and law professors alike have worried that an avowedly structural approach to constitutional ...
Recent Supreme Court election law jurisprudence reflects an unspoken, pernicious trend. Without iden...
This Article critically examines recent Supreme Court election law jurisprudence, with a particular ...
Voting is simple in the United States, right? The process of voting (organizing, running and tabula...
Modem constitutional adjudication is often structured as a conflict between individual rights and st...
The contributions to this symposium, sponsored by the Association of American Law Schools ( AALS ) S...
Increasingly, state and federal courts are asked to resolve election-related disputes, as candidates...
In Vieth v. Jubelirer, the U.S. Supreme Court seemed poised to offer its definitive position on poli...
This timely book is a diverse collection of essays by nationally recognized scholars, politicians, a...
In this Review Essay I explore the rights-structure debate that has captivated the attention of elec...
The founding debate of judicial politics—is Supreme Court decision making driven by law or politics?...