Search for: "Ken Kersch" Results 1 - 20 of 58
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21 Jun 2019, 10:30 am by JB
Balkin, Introduction to Balkinization Symposium on Ken Kersch, Conservatives and the Constitution2. [read post]
1 Jul 2011, 4:34 am by Mary L. Dudziak
The Legal History Blog welcomes Ken Kersch, Boston College. [read post]
10 May 2011, 3:00 am by Karen Tani
WAITE, 1874-1888 (University of South Carolina Press, 2010).Reviewer Ken I. [read post]
10 May 2011, 2:17 pm by David Bernstein
Karen's link (below) to Ken Kersch's review of Paul Kens's new book gives me an excuse to plug Kersch's book Constructing Civil Liberties: Discontinuities in the Development of American Constitutional Law, a wonderful book that hasn't received nearly the attention I think it deserves. [read post]
7 Jun 2019, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
For the symposium on Ken Kersch, Conservatives and the Constitution (Cambridge University Press, 2019).I am delighted to have this opportunity to praise and begin to assess the importance of Ken Kersch's truly remarkable book Conservatives and the Constitution. [read post]
9 Jun 2019, 6:30 am by Stephen Griffin
For the symposium on Ken Kersch, Conservatives and the Constitution (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Ken Kersch’s wonderfully provocative book is one that everyone interested in American constitutionalism ought to read. [read post]
5 Jun 2019, 6:00 am by JB
This week and next at Balkinization we are hosting a symposium on Ken Kersch's new book, Conservatives and the Constitution: Imagining Constitutional Restoration in the Heyday of American Liberalism (Cambridge University Press, 2019). [read post]
10 Jun 2019, 6:30 am by Andrew Koppelman
  Ken Kersch’s Conservatives and the Constitutionsuggests that this transformation has deep roots in the right wing intellectual movements of the mid-twentieth century. [read post]
13 May 2011, 2:38 pm by firstamendmentblogger
Supreme Court and the Media by Richard Davis and Constructing Civil Liberties: Discontinuities in the Development of American Constitutional Law by Ken Kersch. [read post]
6 Sep 2012, 10:16 am by Sandy Levinson
Apropros of Ken Kersch's posting below, I thought I would let readers know of a conference to be held next week at the University of Texas Law School on "Whither American Conservatism? [read post]
3 Jul 2012, 12:07 pm by Paul Caron
Balkinization: Research Note: The Postwar Right’s Constitutionalist Anti-Tax Movement, by Ken Kersch (Boston College): In the wake of the Supreme Court’s holding that the ACA mandate is a tax, we’re probably due to recall that while there was certainly staunch objection on the Right to the expansive new interpretations of... [read post]
18 Jul 2011, 12:11 am by Mike Rappaport
Ken Kersch has some interesting posts on William Crosskey and his effects on modern originalism. [read post]
15 Jul 2011, 6:44 pm by David Bernstein
(David Bernstein) Over at the Legal History Blog, Ken Kersch has two posts on the influence, or lack thereof, of William Crosskey, a law professor at the University of Chicago from 1935 to 1968 (post 1 and post 2). [read post]
15 Jun 2019, 8:44 am by Mark Tushnet
I highlight a comment in Ken Kersch's post: "If Amy Coney Barrett had been appointed instead of Brett Kavanaugh, the relevance of the ostensibly irrelevant and ostensibly superseded stuff I’m talking about in this book would be even more obvious (I would venture that it may very well loom larger for Kavanaugh himself twenty years hence). [read post]
20 Apr 2022, 6:00 am by JB
This week at Balkinization we are hosting a symposium on Joseph Fishkin and William Forbath's new book, The Anti-Oligarchy Constitution: Reconstructing the Economic Foundations of American Democracy (Harvard University Press, 2022).We have assembled a terrific group of commentators, including Kate Andrias (Columbia), Mark Graber (Maryland), Ken Kersch (B.C.), David Pozen (Columbia), Bertrall Ross (Virginia), Gerald Torres (Yale), Mark Tushnet (Harvard), and Emily… [read post]
17 May 2014, 5:01 am by Tracy Thomas
Ken Kersch and Linda McClain have published the Annual Book Review Issue in the Tulsa Law Review. [read post]