[Excerpt] When a court exercises judicial review, it tells Congress, the executive branch or a state to refrain from action that is under way or to take some action that is not being taken. Either way, a democratically accountable institution is told that it cannot do what the people (presumably) want it to do, or that it must do what the people (presumably) do not want it to do
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
The prevailing image of an ideal judiciary is one insulated from the politics of the day, and judge-...
[Excerpt] We are living in a troubled time. Across the political spectrum, there is a great deal of...
It is elementary constitutional law that American courts have the power of judicial review. While a ...
Although it is impossible to determine the future of constitutional dialogue, it is clear that the t...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
This Article draws on my legislative and judicial background to focus both on the tendency of the co...
For over one-hundred and fifty years, the United States Supreme Court has been the most powerful jud...
For more years than I care to contemplate—nigh onto thirty—I have been teaching and writing about co...
“Judicial supremacy” is the idea that the Supreme Court should be viewed as the authoritative interp...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...
The three books reviewed in this essay are recent contributions to the growing literature of constit...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
The prevailing image of an ideal judiciary is one insulated from the politics of the day, and judge-...
[Excerpt] We are living in a troubled time. Across the political spectrum, there is a great deal of...
It is elementary constitutional law that American courts have the power of judicial review. While a ...
Although it is impossible to determine the future of constitutional dialogue, it is clear that the t...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
This article addresses the issue of what is fit for a Supreme Court Justice to do and whether the Co...
This Article draws on my legislative and judicial background to focus both on the tendency of the co...
For over one-hundred and fifty years, the United States Supreme Court has been the most powerful jud...
For more years than I care to contemplate—nigh onto thirty—I have been teaching and writing about co...
“Judicial supremacy” is the idea that the Supreme Court should be viewed as the authoritative interp...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...
The three books reviewed in this essay are recent contributions to the growing literature of constit...
This is a remarkably quiet period in the public life of the Constitution. It is not a quiet time for...
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in N...
America is its Constitution. In a recent string of decisions invalidating federal civil rights legi...
The prevailing image of an ideal judiciary is one insulated from the politics of the day, and judge-...