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7 Oct 2010, 5:30 pm by Reproductive Rights
Slate Magazine: Watch as We Make This Law Disappear, by Barry Friedman & Dahlia Lithwick: How the Roberts Court disguises its conservatism. [read post]
7 Oct 2010, 2:50 pm by Kent Scheidegger
That is the essence of this article by Barry Friedman and Dahlia Lithwick in Slate. [read post]
6 Oct 2010, 5:15 am by Dan Ernst
The current issue of George Washington University Law Review publishes two closely related symposia, one on Philip Hamburger's Law and Judicial Duty and the other on Barry Friedman's The Will of the People. [read post]
5 Oct 2010, 10:41 pm
” —Barry Friedman, Jacob D. [read post]
5 Oct 2010, 8:53 am by Christopher Bird
Two articles which both rank highly on the "read the whole thing" scale today.Firstly, over at Slate, Dahlia Lithwick and Barry Friedman explain how the John Roberts Supreme Court disguises its conservatism. [read post]
5 Oct 2010, 8:21 am by Nabiha Syed
Finally, both Matt Bodie at PrawfsBlawg and Orin Kerr at the Volokh Conspiracy dispute the article on the Roberts Court’s conservatism by Dahlia Lithwick and Barry Friedman for Slate (to which James linked in yesterday’s round-up). [read post]
5 Oct 2010, 6:02 am by pete.black@gmail.com (Peter Black)
These are some of the things I've been tweeting about today: barry friedman and dahlia lithwick on "How the Roberts Court disguises its conservatism" http://j.mp/bfqKVu the hollywood reporter on "Everything you need to know about 'The Social Network' and the law" http://j.mp/9MCdVH wall street journal law blog asks "Would Mark Zuckerberg Win a Suit Against ‘The Social Network’ Makers? [read post]
5 Oct 2010, 5:05 am by Glenn Reynolds
MORE CRITICISM OF THAT DAHLIA LITHWICK / BARRY FRIEDMAN PIECE ON THE SUPREME COURT: Lithwick and Friedman also claim that Roberts used the sawed lady trick in the Court’s recent Second Amendment cases. [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 7:21 pm by David Zaring
Dalia Lithwick and Barry Friedman suggest no in this piece, and Matt Bodie and Orin Kerr disagree. [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 2:57 pm by Matt Bodie
I like both Dahlia Lithwick and Barry Friedman, but I was really disappointed in their latest article for Slate. [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 2:19 pm by Orin Kerr
Writing in Slate, however, Barry Friedman and Dahlia Lithwick have a different explanation. [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 7:30 am by Ted Frank
Friedman/Lithwick's fevered conspiracy theory has no predictive value.) [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 6:05 am by Danielle Citron
Some recommended reading for a rainy Monday morning (in Baltimore, that is):  Barry Friedman and Dahlia Lithwick have written an insightful piece for Slate entitled “Wach as We Make This Law Disappear: How the Roberts Court disguises its conservatism. [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 5:59 am by Glenn Reynolds
ANN ALTHOUSE ON OUR FIRST-MONDAY-IN-OCTOBER RITUAL: “It’s the first Monday in October, time for people like Barry Friedman and Dahlia Lithwick to tell us ‘the court has taken the law for a sharp turn to the ideological right…… while at the same time masterfully concealing it. [read post]
4 Oct 2010, 5:54 am
" Law professor Barry Friedman and Dahlia Lithwick have this jurisprudence essay online at Slate. [read post]
27 Sep 2010, 6:39 pm by George Washington Law Review
 1207 (2010) Barry Friedman, The Will of the People and the Process of Constitutional Change, 78 Geo. [read post]
23 Sep 2010, 5:00 am by Richard Pildes
In recent years, a number of commentators and legal scholars, most significantly my colleague Barry Friedman in his magisterial recent book, The Will of the People, have sought to dissolve this question or suggest it is passé. [read post]
17 Sep 2010, 8:55 am by JB
We find similar ideas in Levinson's and my theory of partisan entrenchment, in Barry Friedman's recent history of the Supreme Court, The Will of the People: How Public Opinion Has Influenced the Supreme Court and Shaped the Meaning of the Constitution (2009), and in Scot Powe’s two great legal realist histories, The Warren Court in American Politics (2000) and The Supreme Court and the American Elite (2009).Each of these approaches are branches on the tree of… [read post]