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4 Jun 2020, 7:00 am by Ronald Collins
Johnson and Jefferson are also the authors of “Gender, Power, Law & Leadership” (2019). [read post]
26 May 2020, 10:29 am by Eugene Volokh
Rev. 1409, 1415 (1990) [("Jefferson's understanding of the scope and rationale of free exercise rights, however, was more limited even than Locke's. [read post]
24 May 2020, 9:30 pm by ernst
Bernstein has published The Education of John Adams (Oxford University Press): The Education of John Adams is the first biography of John Adams by a biographer with legal training. [read post]
16 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  Legal theorist John Codman Hurd insisted that the Court was obliged to obscure the fact that life rather than logic had guided the Court’s determination. [read post]
15 May 2020, 7:35 am by Margaret Wood
Another contemporary of Madison and Jefferson, John Adams, defined a republic as “a government of laws, and not of men” (To the Inhabitants of of the Colony of Massachusetts Bay, March 6, 1775). [read post]
9 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
An excellent rebuttal to that argument is found in John Vlahoplus’s essay demonstrating the indeterminacy of that language. [read post]
8 May 2020, 11:56 am by Scott R. Anderson, Ashley Deeks
The government seized dynamite, high-powered rifles, Nazi and Confederate flags, and a document described as a contract with the former prime minister of Dominica, Patrick John. [read post]
7 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
”  Of course, as Leonard and Cornell document, Thomas Jefferson, the Declaration’s putative author, neither believed nor practiced any of this. [read post]
6 May 2020, 10:55 am by David Oscar Markus
We have had jury trials, in every state in the union, for hundreds of years—since before we ratified the Constitution, before Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence. [read post]
6 May 2020, 6:30 am by Mark Graber
  Marshall and Jefferson disputed only which elites were authorized to make independent constitutional judgments. [read post]
4 May 2020, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
 John Marshall ended his first paragraph in McCulloch v. [read post]
3 May 2020, 6:58 am by Derek T. Muller
But it’s the wind-up for a recent per curiam Sixth Circuit opinion from a panel consisting of Judges Jeff Sutton, John Nalbandian, and David McKeague. [read post]
3 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Thomas Jefferson’s understanding of the Constitution and republicanism is understood in contrast to John Taylor’s and William Manning’s. [read post]
24 Apr 2020, 8:30 am by Paul Swedlund
Candidates of national stature – George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison – already existed in abundance, political parties capable of promoting them formed swiftly, and “a circulation of newspapers through the entire body of the people” allowed voters themselves to become informed about the issues and discerning in the exercise of their suffrage. [read post]
20 Apr 2020, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
  Indeed, the first casebooks in constitutional law, at the turn of the 20th century, began with treatments of constitutional amendment inasmuch as their authors correctly recognized, as John Marshall put it in McCulloch v. [read post]
3 Apr 2020, 6:49 pm by Sandy Levinson
"  Michael Sandel, who established his reputation as a critic of John Rawls, has been articulating his own theory of the "common good" for quite a while, though I'm not aware that it's really made much headway (and I find it more than a bit problematic myself). [read post]