The average American who thinks of our Federal Document only in terms of the Philadelphia Convention may not have fully appreciated the fact that before the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown, every American State had already achieved its constitutional independence and had established its own organic law, by which it should not only remain free from the foreign dominion of Great Britain, but should also remain an indestructible unit in The American Federal System. He must remember that the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union which leagued the alleged sovereign and independent States, were in force at the time of the convention and that many of the men delegated to attend that convention understood that these Articles were to b...
This Article seeks to support that position with an argument in three parts. Part I describes the co...
The debates of nine western constitutional conventions between 1849 and 1889 provide considerable ev...
Countries lacking a single canonical text define the “constitution” to include all laws that perform...
The average American who thinks of our Federal Document only in terms of the Philadelphia Convention...
American Constitution-Making: The Neglected State Constitutional Sources\u27 looks at a frequently o...
Understanding American constitutionalism can be advanced by distinguishing three matrices of its pec...
The Constitution that was crafted in Philadelphia over the spring and summer of 1787 created an inte...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
"The Constitution, as the fireside companion of the American citizen, preserves in full freshness an...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, Federalism, in The Cambridge Companion to the United States Constitution...
The Constitution is an anachronism, 200 years out of date. Although the Bill of Rights is adequate, ...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
A standard view at the time of the adoption of the Constitution was that “a constitution does not in...
The Articles of Confederation were the formal charter of the government of the United States until t...
This Article seeks to support that position with an argument in three parts. Part I describes the co...
The debates of nine western constitutional conventions between 1849 and 1889 provide considerable ev...
Countries lacking a single canonical text define the “constitution” to include all laws that perform...
The average American who thinks of our Federal Document only in terms of the Philadelphia Convention...
American Constitution-Making: The Neglected State Constitutional Sources\u27 looks at a frequently o...
Understanding American constitutionalism can be advanced by distinguishing three matrices of its pec...
The Constitution that was crafted in Philadelphia over the spring and summer of 1787 created an inte...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
"The Constitution, as the fireside companion of the American citizen, preserves in full freshness an...
The author considers the Articles, first on the world\u27s stage as a landmark. He next treats the A...
Book Chapter Barry Cushman, Federalism, in The Cambridge Companion to the United States Constitution...
The Constitution is an anachronism, 200 years out of date. Although the Bill of Rights is adequate, ...
American constitutional federalism emerged from a complex matrix comprised by multiple intellectual,...
A standard view at the time of the adoption of the Constitution was that “a constitution does not in...
The Articles of Confederation were the formal charter of the government of the United States until t...
This Article seeks to support that position with an argument in three parts. Part I describes the co...
The debates of nine western constitutional conventions between 1849 and 1889 provide considerable ev...
Countries lacking a single canonical text define the “constitution” to include all laws that perform...