This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial power: controlling the types of cases judges are empowered to decide by expanding and/or contracting federal subject matter jurisdiction. Congress has recently sought to shape judicial power through a range of proposals that variously enlarge and compress federal subject matter jurisdiction. In 2004, for example, the House of Representatives voted to strip federal courts of jurisdiction over constitutional challenges to the Defense of Marriage Act and the Pledge of the Allegiance. Just a few months later, the new 109th Congress undertook a groundbreaking expansion of federal subject matter jurisdiction when it expressly empowered federal courts ...
Separation of powers in the federal government inevitably generates conflicts among the branches. In...
Senate Bill No. 2646 proposed in the Congress is unprecedented in scope. If it is enacted the Suprem...
Personal jurisdiction is a mess, and only Congress can fix it. The field is a morass, filled with bu...
This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial pow...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...
The extent of Congress\u27s authority to control the jurisdiction of the federal courts has been the...
Recent legislation has reinvigorated the scholarly debate over the proper relationship between Congr...
Over the past half-century, federal courts scholarship concerning congressional control over the aut...
Congress has many available tools to influence the federal judiciary. In this article, we consider C...
article published in law reviewFew questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars...
The very substantial literature on the scope of congressional power to strip courts of jurisdiction ...
Article III presents a conundrum for scholars seeking a coherent explanation of the federal courts\u...
Congress regularly, and with increasing frequency, removes jurisdiction from the federal courts. Thi...
Federal laws that regulate state institutions give rise to what the Supreme Court has described as t...
Separation of powers in the federal government inevitably generates conflicts among the branches. In...
Senate Bill No. 2646 proposed in the Congress is unprecedented in scope. If it is enacted the Suprem...
Personal jurisdiction is a mess, and only Congress can fix it. The field is a morass, filled with bu...
This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial pow...
The Constitution grants Congress the power to regulate the jurisdiction of the federal courts. Congr...
Scholars have long debated Congress’s power to curb federal jurisdiction and have consistently assum...
The extent of Congress\u27s authority to control the jurisdiction of the federal courts has been the...
Recent legislation has reinvigorated the scholarly debate over the proper relationship between Congr...
Over the past half-century, federal courts scholarship concerning congressional control over the aut...
Congress has many available tools to influence the federal judiciary. In this article, we consider C...
article published in law reviewFew questions in the field of Federal Courts have captivated scholars...
The very substantial literature on the scope of congressional power to strip courts of jurisdiction ...
Article III presents a conundrum for scholars seeking a coherent explanation of the federal courts\u...
Congress regularly, and with increasing frequency, removes jurisdiction from the federal courts. Thi...
Federal laws that regulate state institutions give rise to what the Supreme Court has described as t...
Separation of powers in the federal government inevitably generates conflicts among the branches. In...
Senate Bill No. 2646 proposed in the Congress is unprecedented in scope. If it is enacted the Suprem...
Personal jurisdiction is a mess, and only Congress can fix it. The field is a morass, filled with bu...