Search for: "Kurt Lash"
Results 121 - 140
of 250
Sort by Relevance
|
Sort by Date
4 Jan 2016, 11:32 am
As a follow-up to my prior post, I was pleased to learn that Kurt Lash is putting together a collection of Reconstruction materials for the University of Chicago Press. [read post]
15 Dec 2015, 12:00 am
"This proposed law is a classic example of a government lashing out at political ideas it doesn't like," said Greg Magarian, JD, professor of law in the School of Law. [read post]
14 Dec 2015, 9:12 pm
“This proposed law is a classic example of a government lashing out at political ideas it doesn’t like,” said Greg Magarian, JD, professor of law in the School of Law. [read post]
13 Aug 2015, 2:55 pm
In the very interesting Clough Center symposium referred to in my previous post, moderator Jim Fleming asked where we are in the debate between the various forms of originalism and living constitutionalism. [read post]
16 Jul 2015, 12:41 pm
Before I had that chance, however, a debate has broken out between Kurt Lash and Damon Root on the meaning of the Privileges or Immunities Clause. [read post]
6 Feb 2015, 6:00 am
Below the fold is Version 3.1 of the census of law prof Twitter users. [read post]
6 Jan 2015, 5:00 am
The list also includes two important books (by Kurt Lash and Philip Hamburger), two other Supreme Court cases, and two major separation-of-powers controversies outside the courts. [read post]
19 Oct 2014, 12:30 am
The History Roll has a review of Kurt T. [read post]
26 May 2014, 9:05 pm
[Ilya Shapiro] Didn’t link this earlier: Kenneth Anderson discusses his excellent Cato Supreme Court Review article on Kiobel, the Alien Tort case [Opinio Juris] Kurt Lash guestblogs on 14th Amendment privileges and immunities clause [Volokh Conspiracy] Supreme Court reviving law/equity distinction? [read post]
9 May 2014, 5:11 pm
The Slaughterhouse Cases is one of the most despised decisions in American constitutional law. [read post]
8 May 2014, 9:25 am
Prior posts in this series explored the history of the Privileges or Immunities Clause. [read post]
7 May 2014, 9:16 am
(Kurt T. [read post]
6 May 2014, 8:23 am
In early January of 1867, President Andrew Johnson made one last desperate attempt to stop the ratification of the Privileges or Immunities Clause. [read post]
2 May 2014, 1:26 pm
Kurt Lash (University of Illinois College of Law) will be guest-blogging next week about his new book, “The Fourteenth Amendment and the Privileges and Immunities of American Citizenship”: This book presents the history behind a revolution in American liberty: the 1868 addition of the Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. [read post]
14 Apr 2014, 6:12 am
Kurt Lash's approach to the question has been to do something not previously attempted by historians or legal scholars: read all the available literature by antebellum and Reconstruction-era contemporaries on the subject. [read post]
4 Apr 2014, 8:12 am
On November 3, 1790, the Virginia House of Delegates adopted a resolution condemning Secretary of Treasury Alexander Hamilton’s Funding Act of 1790. [read post]
29 Dec 2013, 9:30 pm
The original understandings of its framers and ratifiers provide a point of departure for this interpretive endeavor, but can never fully specify the Amendment’s meaning for the present generation.Boyce’s argument proceeds as a series of engagements with the originalisms of Philip Hamburger, Kurt Lash, Steven Calabresi, Jack Balkin, and Randy Barnett. [read post]
18 Dec 2013, 8:10 am
The symposium includes essays by several prominent legal scholars, including Steven Calabresi, Bradford Clark, Richard Epstein, John Harrison, Kurt Lash, John McGinnis, and John Yoo. [read post]
26 Nov 2013, 10:55 am
Noel Canning (the Supreme Court’s recess appointments case) on behalf of ourselves and a group of other constitutional law scholars, including co-conspirators Dale Carpenter, Eugene Kontorovich, and Nick Rosenkranz, as well as Nathan Chapman, Samuel Bray, John Eastman, Richard Epstein, Michael Greve, Joshua Hawley, Kurt Lash, and Sai Prakash. [read post]
3 Nov 2013, 7:40 pm
The first talk will be Monday, November 4th, at 3:00 pm at the University of Illinois Law School, courtesy of Professor Kurt Lash’s constitutional law colloquium. [read post]