Search for: "Michael Klarman"
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9 Mar 2017, 8:16 am
To learn more about the Silver Gavel Awards, go to www.ambar.org/gavelawards.The following is a complete list of finalists, with links to their work:BOOKS“Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy”Heather Ann Thompson, authorPenguin Random House/Pantheon Bookshttp://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/178182/blood-in-the-water-by-heather-ann-thompson/9780375423222/“Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City”Matthew Desmond, authorPenguin… [read post]
9 Mar 2017, 8:16 am
To learn more about the Silver Gavel Awards, go to www.ambar.org/gavelawards.The following is a complete list of finalists, with links to their work:BOOKS“Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy”Heather Ann Thompson, authorPenguin Random House/Pantheon Bookshttp://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/178182/blood-in-the-water-by-heather-ann-thompson/9780375423222/“Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City”Matthew Desmond, authorPenguin… [read post]
28 Oct 2019, 3:54 am
Michael Klarman details how the death of segregation was hastened considerably by the backlash to Brown v. [read post]
28 Feb 2015, 11:05 am
Gerken contrasts her “internalist” account of Windsor with “psychoanalytic” ones offered by scholars such as Rick Pildes, Michael Klarman, Mary Dudziak, and myself. [read post]
21 Sep 2020, 6:30 am
Constitutional rot is a relative term and is thus a more helpful way to understand the constitutional aspects of our current predicament than concepts like “constitutional crisis” (of which I am perhaps overly fond) or even “authoritarianism” (as in Michael Klarman’s forthcoming Harvard Foreword). [read post]
16 Apr 2015, 7:39 am
Turning to the same-sex-marriage issue, this blog featured the first in a two-part series by Michael Klarman on the history of the same-sex marriage movement. [read post]
22 Jun 2011, 8:45 am
I could have easily written a book twice as long, that wouldn’t have been half as “good” from the reader’s perspective.The vast majority of academic books I’ve read should have been at least 30% shorter, though there are some very long books–like Michael Klarman’s From Jim Crow to Civil Rights–that fully justify their length.UPDATE: I’ll always be grateful to Professor Black of Brandeis University’s History Department, who… [read post]
21 Jun 2011, 6:00 am
Consider, for example, the perspectives on the subject found in the following works: Michael Klarman, From Jim Crow to Civil Rights; Matt Lassiter & Andrew Lewis, eds., The Moderates' Dilemma: Massive Resistance to School Desegregation in Virginia; Neil McMillen, The Citizens' Council: Organized Resistance to the Second Reconstruction; Jason Sokol, There Goes My Every Thing: White Southerners in the Age of Civil Rights; Anders Walker, The Ghost of Jim Crow; and John… [read post]
20 Jan 2015, 7:00 am
The backlash thesis is well known, and is associated most commonly with the work of Gerald Rosenberg and Michael Klarman. [read post]
22 Nov 2009, 6:31 am
This bears on the arguments that scholars such as Gerald Rosenberg and Michael Klarman have been making about the utility (or futility) of courts as engineers of social change. [read post]
3 Jun 2021, 12:22 pm
Books The Founders Coup by Michael J. [read post]
4 May 2017, 5:45 pm
Madison, Hamilton, Jefferson, and Washington were indeed giants who took their role as leaders of the fragile new nation with the utmost seriousness, even if one pays full attention to their more human-all-too-human aspects set out in Michael Klarman’s magnificent study. [read post]
22 May 2020, 6:30 am
Other writers, such as Jack Balkin, Michael Klarman and Sotirios Barber have furthered the study of idolatry from a critical perspective, raising serious questions about how and why these fundamental texts continue to be idolised. [read post]
6 May 2019, 7:30 am
This suggestion has been advanced by Professor Michael Klarman of Harvard Law School, among others. [read post]
22 Nov 2007, 6:42 am
Michael Klarman has argued that one perverse effect of Brown was to focus increasing attention on the NAACP, leading to numerous efforts to wipe the organization out in the South, while simultaneously helping demobilize the Civil Rights Movement until the late 1950's. [read post]
24 Feb 2020, 11:24 am
Klarman, “How Great Were the ‘Great’ Marshall Court Decisions? [read post]
9 Jun 2007, 10:19 am
We draw on these understandings to question leading accounts of backlash featured in the work of Michael Klarman, William Eskridge, and Cass Sunstein. [read post]
18 Dec 2018, 1:15 pm
Professor Michael Klarman recently argued in favor of court-packing as a “remedy” to what he views as “the Republican Party’s hijacking of the Court,” and to offset the two recent appointments made “by a president who lost the popular vote by nearly three million votes” that were “confirmed by a majority of senators who represented a minority of the American population. [read post]
25 Sep 2024, 7:35 am
In an October 2020 interview, Harvard law professor Michael Klarman laid out a plan for Democrats should they win the White House and both congressional chambers. [read post]
7 Jun 2007, 5:06 am
We draw on these understandings to question leading accounts of backlash featured in the work of Michael Klarman, William Eskridge, and Cass Sunstein. [read post]