Search for: "David Golove" Results 41 - 55 of 55
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4 Sep 2018, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
In dueling Harvard Law Review articles in 1995, Professor Laurence Tribe debated these issues with Professors Bruce Ackerman and David Golove. [read post]
26 Jul 2011, 6:22 pm by Harlan Cohen
In his lead essay, David Golove constructs a counter-narrative in which the Court's decisions in Hamdi, Hamdan, and Boumediene to expand detainee rights, expand judicial oversight, and overrule Executive treaty interpretations, "actually have stronger roots in traditional constitutional doctrine than has been widely appreciated. [read post]
15 Apr 2010, 7:50 pm by Duncan Hollis
  Although NYU lost a truly tremendous figure in Thomas Franck last year, it hired José Alvarez and Ryan Goodman to join the likes of Philip Alston, David Golove, Robert Howse, Benedict Kingsbury, Mattias Kumm, Andy Lowenfeld, Linda Silberman, and Joseph Weiler (and that’s only a partial listing of NYU’s international law faculty, not to mention their global visitors, clinicians, and institute folks who also spend time working on international… [read post]
4 Jun 2014, 5:25 am by Amy Howe
  Steven Mazie  summarizes the case for The Economist, while at Just Security, David Golove and Marty Lederman weigh in on the case. [read post]
28 Nov 2005, 4:10 pm
Let me respond quickly to Marty Lederman's comment to my post re David Luban's WP article below - my numbers track his:1. [read post]
4 Nov 2013, 10:27 am by Marty Lederman
  And, as I argue in an amicus brief filed in the Bond case on behalf of myself, David Golove and John Mikhail, the Court's Necessary and Proper holding in Holland reflected a well-settled and virtually uncontroverted constitutional understanding in all three branches and among commentators long before Holland. [read post]
13 Oct 2014, 4:27 am by Jonathan Hafetz
Various scholars, including David Golove and Dan Hulsebosch, have advanced our understanding of the Constitution’s internationalist dimensions. [read post]
2 May 2008, 1:53 am
David Golove, among others, has offered (and is developing) a powerful case that there is such a constitutional obligation, at least as an historical matter. [read post]
8 Aug 2015, 9:54 am by Marty Lederman
I'm not going to wade too deeply into Jack and Sandy's somewhat metaphysical colloquy about whether a congressional override of the President's veto on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) would be a "constitutional moment," a vote of "no confidence" in the President, or a barrier to what would otherwise be "regime change. [read post]
26 Jul 2011, 2:30 pm by Jeremy Rabkin
Toward the end of this volume, David Golove offers an intriguing essay ("The Supreme Court, the War on Terror and the American Just War Tradition") which argues, among other things, that the Court's recent rulings on detainee rights in Guantanamo should be seen as, in some way, extensions of early American experience where "many of the most delicate and controversial questions under the laws of war were subject to judicial resolution in prize proceedings. [read post]
4 Dec 2018, 10:22 am by Matthew Scott Johnson
Casto’s book FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND THE CONSTITUTION IN THE AGE OF FIGHTING SAIL is cited in the following article: David Golove, The American Founding and Global Justice: Hamiltonian and Jeffersonian Approaches, 57 VA. [read post]
16 Feb 2010, 5:43 am by Gerard Magliocca
Balfour’s poodle.[2] David Lloyd George The most troubling countermajoritarian difficulty in modern constitutional law is Rule Twenty-Two of the United States Senate.[3] Forty-one Senators, who may represent less than forty-one percent of the population due to the malapportionment of the Senate, can veto most legislation and presidential nominations by refusing to invoke “cloture” and thereby allow debate on those matters to end.[4] Though the filibuster is woven into… [read post]
22 May 2014, 7:44 am by Bruce Ackerman
Elaborating arguments developed by Larry Tribe, they may insist that only treaties, approved by two-thirds of the Senate, serve as constitutionally appropriate vehicles for such agreements – thereby making it much tougher to get passed into law.To parry this threat, free-market conservatives will emphasize post-New Deal transformations that gave popular legitimacy to this Article one detour around the Treaty Clause, relying on the narrative that David Golove and I provide in… [read post]
26 Jul 2008, 12:28 am
The Attorney General attracted a great deal of attention last week by delivering an address to the American Enterprise Institute in which he urged Congress to do something about the habeas corpus proceedings that are now underway as a result of the Boumediene decision. [read post]