Search for: "Ethan Leib" Results 181 - 191 of 191
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20 Jun 2018, 11:53 am by Philip Bobbitt
” (Professors Jed Shugarman and Ethan Leib have presented a different argument regarding self-pardons and the Take Care Clause, available here.) [read post]
4 Dec 2019, 9:00 am by Masha Simonova
This interpretation is similar to that of Andrew Kent, Jed Shugerman and Ethan Leib in their article “Faithful Execution and Article II,” in which they argue that this clause imposes a “duty of fidelity” on the president. [read post]
21 Oct 2010, 5:00 am by Laura Appleman
Thomas [FL]) (Fall 2010); Eloisa Rodriguez-Dod (Nova Southeastern) (Spring 2010) Florida State:  Susan Bandes (DePaul) (Fall 2010); Elizabeth Burleson (South Dakota) (Fall 2010); Neil Cohen (Tennessee) (Spring 2011); Gary Lucas (Texas Wesleyan) (Spring 2011); Deana Pollard Sacks (Texas Southern) (Fall 2010) Fordham: Aditi Bagchi (Penn) (2010-11); James Brudney (Ohio State) (Fall 2010); Nestor Davidson (Colorado) (Fall 2010); Joshua Dressler (Ohio State) (Spring 2011); Brian Fitzpatrick… [read post]
28 Oct 2007, 9:48 pm
À I am grateful to Ethan Leib, Linda Ross Meyer, Austin Sarat, Jonathan Simon, and Bob Weisberg for comments and conversations about this paper. [read post]
31 Aug 2007, 2:05 am
I now know Ethan Leib's baby's name, and that Miranda Fleischer's favorite Semisonic song is "Singing In My Sleep. [read post]
27 Dec 2018, 6:59 pm by Anthony Gaughan
Scholars have offered a range of opinions on the issue, including Eric Muller, Richard Epstein, Michael McConnell, Andrew Kent, Ethan Leib, and Jed Shugerman, but no consensus has yet emerged. [read post]
3 Feb 2024, 11:27 am by Christopher J. Walker
ARTICLES Three Modalities of (Originalist) Fiduciary Constitutionalism Ethan J Leib There is an ongoing body of scholarship in contemporary constitutional theory and legal history that can be labeled ‘fiduciary constitutionalism’. [read post]
6 Jul 2020, 5:54 am by Jed Handelsman Shugerman
On June 29, Chief Justice John Roberts relied heavily on something called “the Decision of 1789” to expand presidential removal powers. [read post]
A soon-to-be-published article by one of us (Kent), co-authored with Ethan Leib and Jed Shugerman, shows that the plain or dictionary meaning of the Take Care Clause in 1787 was consistent with a specialized meaning that had developed over the centuries in Anglo-American law. [read post]