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15 Aug 2012, 10:39 am by Adam White
Bickel’s answer ingeniously married conservative and progressive instincts. [read post]
15 Aug 2012, 7:25 am by Floyd Abrams
Bickel & Black (Hugo) Bickel’s treatment of Justice Black has always been of special interest to me. [read post]
15 Aug 2012, 6:43 am by Rachel Sachs
Briefly: This blog continues its symposium on the fiftieth anniversary of Alexander Bickel’s The Least Dangerous Branch with posts by Michael Seidman and Kathryn Watts. [read post]
14 Aug 2012, 1:13 pm by Kathryn Watts
In light of Bickel’s statements about certiorari in The Least Dangerous Branch, the fiftieth anniversary of Bickel’s book seems as good a time as any to reflect upon the highly discretionary nature of certiorari – which Bickel so clearly embraced in extolling the Court’s passive virtues – and to consider whether the Court’s docket-setting discretion should persist in its current form. [read post]
14 Aug 2012, 8:01 am by Michael Seidman
   Bickel endorsed political judging as only a “passive virtue. [read post]
14 Aug 2012, 6:56 am by Kiran Bhat
Our symposium on Alexander Bickel and the fiftieth anniversary of the publication of The Least Dangerous Branch begins with a foreword by Ronald Collins, who organized the symposium. [read post]
23 Jul 2012, 10:38 am by Zoe Tillman
William Brewer III, a partner at Bickel & Brewer and lead counsel for 3M, said in a written statement that they were pleased the court denied Davis' motion to consolidate the cases. [read post]
11 Jul 2012, 9:05 pm by Walter Olson
The good, the bad, and the beyond belief: “Ten Commandments” judge no favorite with business defendants: “Trial lawyers putting their campaign cash behind Roy Moore for Alabama chief justice” [Birmingham News via Charlie Mahtesian, Politico; same thing twelve years ago] From James Taranto, a brief history of Supreme Court leaks [WSJ "Best of the Web," mentions my Daily op-ed] Pennsylvania: Judge’s swearing-in ceremony “was filled with appreciation to… [read post]
11 Jul 2012, 10:16 am
Investigator Andy Bickel stated that wearing life jackets could have prevented the high number of drowning deaths. [read post]
5 Jul 2012, 12:47 pm by Lawrence Solum
First, this distinction explains the connection between the countermajoritarian difficulty and the “passive virtues” technique that Alexander Bickel devised for the Court. [read post]
23 May 2012, 12:33 am by Mark Tushnet
That's certainly one way of understanding Bickel's advocacy of the passive virtues, for example. [read post]
22 May 2012, 7:13 am by Steve Vladeck
In light of the Supreme Court’s grant of certiorari yesterday to review the Second Circuit’s decision in Clapper v. [read post]
9 Apr 2012, 9:39 am by William G. Ross
As Yale Law Professor Alexander Bickel once warned, the Court needs to stand above political involvement precisely because the constitutional issues that it addresses so often have political dimensions. [read post]
9 Apr 2012, 4:59 am by Lawrence Solum
A long line of leading constitutional scholars, such as Bruce Ackerman, Alexander Bickel, Charles Black, Walter Dellinger, Gerald Gunther, and Michael Paulsen, have argued that the Constitution does not authorize limited conventions. [read post]
5 Apr 2012, 11:05 am by Zoe Tillman
Lead counsel for 3M, William Brewer III of Bickel & Brewer, said in a written statement: “We oppose consolidation and believe the cases should evolve separately. [read post]
5 Apr 2012, 6:13 am by Paul Kirgis
In a forthcoming Kansas Law Review article now available at SSRN, Richard Reuben comprehensively deconstructs five of the most important FAA decisions–Prima Paint, Southland, Gilmer, Circuit City, and Concepcion–to demonstrate how they would have come out differently had the Court actually applied conservative legal principles, namely Bickel’s prudentialism, Scalia’s textualism, and Rehnquist’s federalism. [read post]
20 Mar 2012, 1:54 pm by Cornell Library
In addition to rereading Mill’s Representative Democracy, I turned to Alex Bickel’s The Supreme Court and the Idea of Progress which was an analysis, (ultimately rejected), of the one-man, one –vote issue. [read post]