This Article argues that the origins of judicial review lie in corporate law. Diverging from standard historical accounts that locate the origins in theories of fundamental law or in the American structure of government, the Article argues that judicial review was the continuation of a longstanding English practice of constraining corporate ordinances by requiring that they be not repugnant to the laws of the nation. This practice of limiting legislation under the standard of repugnancy to the laws of England became applicable to American colonial law. The history of this repugnancy practice explains why the Framers of the Constitution presumed that judges would void legislation repugnant to the Constitution—what is now referred to as judic...
The unique and antidemocratic power of judicial review by the United States Supreme Court is not a b...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
Until the 1970s, scholars routinely asserted that courts in the late nineteenth century initiated a ...
This Article argues that the origins of judicial review lie in corporate law. Diverging from standar...
This Article argues that the origins of judicial review lie in corporate law. Diverging from standar...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
What we now call judicial review in the United States became part of the American constitutional sys...
While few people would question the authority of the courts to exercise the power of judicial review...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
While scholars have long probed the original understanding of judicial review and the early judicial...
This article tells the story of the birth of modern judicial review. In the conventional account, th...
The unique and antidemocratic power of judicial review by the United States Supreme Court is not a b...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
Until the 1970s, scholars routinely asserted that courts in the late nineteenth century initiated a ...
This Article argues that the origins of judicial review lie in corporate law. Diverging from standar...
This Article argues that the origins of judicial review lie in corporate law. Diverging from standar...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
What we now call judicial review in the United States became part of the American constitutional sys...
While few people would question the authority of the courts to exercise the power of judicial review...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
This year marks the 200th anniversary of Marbury v. Madison, the case which is often taught in law s...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
This paper accompanies Mary Sarah Bilder, The Corporate Origins of Judicial Review , 116 Yale L.J. 5...
While scholars have long probed the original understanding of judicial review and the early judicial...
This article tells the story of the birth of modern judicial review. In the conventional account, th...
The unique and antidemocratic power of judicial review by the United States Supreme Court is not a b...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
Until the 1970s, scholars routinely asserted that courts in the late nineteenth century initiated a ...