Search for: "David Pozen" Results 201 - 219 of 219
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27 Feb 2013, 4:20 am by Benjamin Wittes
 As David Pozen argued in a fine paper, in any situation involving potential disclosure of national security information, the court may view even disclosure of seemingly innocuous information as building a “mosaic” of data that terrorists can exploit. [read post]
21 Apr 2024, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
As Columbia Law Professor David Pozen observes, in the more than half-century since the unrest of the late 1960s, “student protesters have repeatedly occupied [administration buildings,] held sit-ins in administrative offices, waged hunger strikes, staged walkouts, and more. [read post]
15 Oct 2018, 5:00 am by Joseph Fishkin
One set of moves involves what my coauthor David Pozen calls anti-hardball, which paradoxically sometimes requires hardball: Democrats should use li [read post]
29 Jul 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Mark Tushnet, Taking Back the Constitution: Activist Judges and the Next Age of American Law (Yale University Press 2020).Leah LitmanMark Tushnet’s Taking Back the Constitution is a tour de force. [read post]
18 Jun 2019, 6:00 am by Guest Blogger
For the symposium on Ken Kersch, Conservatives and the Constitution (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Ken I. [read post]
12 May 2017, 4:43 am by Benjamin Wittes
Daphna Renan and David Pozen make a similar point, arguing that “the process by which Comey was fired appears to raise a version of the same professional concerns that the firing supposedly responds to”: a breach of Justice Department norms developed to protect integrity and independence. [read post]
29 Jun 2017, 8:24 pm by David Pozen
Jeremy Kessler and David Pozen The University of Chicago Law Review has published a response by Charles Barzun to our article Working Themselves Impure: A Life Cycle Theory of Legal Theories. [read post]
22 Dec 2010, 4:48 pm by Frank Pasquale
Such data gathering should not be what David Pozen calls a “deep secret;” that is, citizens should not be “in the dark about the fact that they are being kept in the dark. [read post]
6 Mar 2019, 7:18 am by Michael Dorf
Through a combination of luck, the Electoral College, and what Professors Joseph Fishkin and David Pozen call “asymmetrical constitutional hardball,” Republican presidents have named 14 of 18 justices in the last 50 years, despite losing the popular vote in a majority of presidential elections during that period. [read post]
18 Feb 2015, 8:00 am by Peter Margulies
  Promoting dialogue and curbing such polarizing “self-help” (see David Pozen’s study of the latter) thereby furthers the Framers’ design. [read post]
15 May 2019, 6:00 am by Guest Blogger
There is a profound affinity between “constitutional faith”—that this document, its institutions, and the “conversation” around it give us the materials to hang together, survive crises, and get to a better place—and its shadow, what David Pozen calls constitutional bad faith: denying the validity of disagreement and the prospect of political loss by loading up the Constitution with dogma that a lucid and candid mind might recognize as such but… [read post]
27 Oct 2020, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
As I shall explain, any assessment of the relative costs and benefits of these and other proposals depends crucially on what exactly one thinks the problem is.Defining the ProblemMost Democrats see the current problem as one of what legal scholars Joseph Fishkin and David Pozen term “asymmetrical constitutional hardball. [read post]
5 May 2013, 7:17 am by Rebecca Tushnet
Seana Shiffrin, Lying and the Law Discussant: Jack Balkin Chapter of book on sincerity and law. [read post]
23 Jul 2020, 5:55 am by Kevin Kaufman
Key Findings Allowing companies to fully and immediately deduct investments in structures is one of the most cost-efficient ways lawmakers can stimulate investment, create jobs, and boost GDP during a post-pandemic recovery. [read post]
Writing in the Stanford Law Review, another professor, David Engel, [2] precisely articulated the standards to which corporations would need to subscribe in order to legitimate this unregulated power within a democratic society: Disclose fully the impact of their operations on society Obey the law Restrain their impact on government– both elections and administration Today, we are surrounded by the wreckage of this seemingly noble experiment. [read post]
26 Dec 2018, 9:30 pm by Series of Essays
Yet, according to Columbia Law School Professor David Pozen, modern advocates for transparency now pursue a more libertarian, skeptical bent that aims to make government not more democratic and functional but smaller and less effective. [read post]
22 Feb 2012, 1:30 pm by Benjamin Wittes
”  Many in this group are graduates of this law school: My special assistant and Navy reservist Brodi Kemp, who is here with me today (class of ‘04); Caroline Krass at OLC (class of ’93); Dan Koffsky at OLC (class of ’78); Marty Lederman, formerly of OLC (class of ‘88); Greg Craig, the former White House Counsel (class of ’72); Bob Litt, General Counsel of ODNI (class of ‘76); Retired Marine Colonel Bill Lietzau (class of ’89); Beth Brinkman at… [read post]