Search for: "Neil S. Siegel" Results 161 - 180 of 195
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12 Aug 2011, 1:42 pm by Kurt Lash, guest-blogging
This article has no quarrel with Jack’s or anyone else’s particular theory of interpretation and construction. [read post]
6 May 2019, 6:30 am by David Pozen
More saliently, controversies over John McCain’s and Ted Cruz’s presidential eligibility ended up solidifying support for the position that children of U.S. citizens born abroad are “natural born citizens” within the meaning of the clause. [read post]
12 Aug 2013, 8:40 am by Ilya Somin
Other contributors include Jack Balkin, Andrew Koppelman, Richard Epstein, Neil Siegel, and Linda Greenhouse, among others. [read post]
28 Nov 2017, 5:39 am by Richard Primus
  Readers interested in a broad conversation could read Jack Balkin, Mark Tushnet, Ilya Somin, Josh Blackman, Neil Siegel, and David Super, as well as a responseto my initial essay from Calabresi and Hirji themselves. [read post]
31 Jan 2011, 8:43 am by Adam Thierer
(2009) · Clay Shirky, Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age (2010) · Nick Bilton, I Live in the Future & Here’s How It Works (2010) · Kevin Kelly, What Technology Wants (2010) · Neil [read post]
24 Oct 2016, 4:35 am by Edith Roberts
” At Balkinization, Neil Siegel summarizes his recent contribution to a Yale Law Journal symposium on Justice Samuel Alito, concluding “that, especially in light of Justice Scalia’s passing, Justice Alito has become the primary judicial voice of the many millions of Americans who appear to be losing the culture wars, including in conflicts over gay rights, women’s access to reproductive healthcare, religious exemptions, and affirmative… [read post]
9 Jun 2015, 6:16 am by Curtis Bradley
If functional concerns are stripped out of the political question doctrine in the service of formalism, they may well reemerge at the merits stage, something that Neil Siegel and I suggested in a recent article on Noel Canning in the Supreme Court Review. [read post]
13 Jul 2016, 5:00 am by JB
Justice Scalia's death also affected the Supreme Court's choice of cases for the next Term's docket. [read post]
31 Jan 2010, 10:47 am by Adam Thierer
Negroponte In his 1992 anti-technology screed Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology, the late social critic Neil Postman greeted the unfolding Information Age with a combination of skepticism and scorn. [read post]
12 Sep 2021, 12:00 pm by Eugene Volokh
Barnett's first excerpt comes from the report's introduction and Barnett quotes all its seven enumerated central points. [read post]
9 Nov 2021, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
Writing about Hellerin the Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Professor Reva Siegel explained how “[t]he New Right embraced originalism as the jurisprudential vehicle for . . . [read post]
9 Nov 2021, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
Writing about Hellerin the Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Professor Reva Siegel explained how “[t]he New Right embraced originalism as the jurisprudential vehicle for . . . [read post]
30 Aug 2010, 3:23 pm by Adam Thierer
Leading proponents of this variant of Internet pessimism include:  Neil Postman (Technopoly: The Surrender of Culture to Technology), Andrew Keen, (The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet is Killing our Culture), Lee Siegel, (Against the Machine: Being Human in the Age of the Electronic Mob), Mark Helprin, (Digital Barbarism) and, to a lesser degree, Jaron Lanier (You Are Not a Gadget) and Nicholas Carr (The Big Switch and The Shallows). [read post]
25 Mar 2012, 9:30 pm
 Neil Siegel and I elaborated this argument earlier in the year in the Yale Law Journal Online. 2) Tomorrow the Court will turn to the merits of the challenges to the minimum coverage provision. [read post]
5 Dec 2011, 6:30 am by Joshua Matz
  At Verdict, Michael Dorf and Neil Siegel argue that the Anti-Injunction Act does not bar the Court’s review of the individual mandate, but they add that, to resolve any doubt, “Congress should enact a special-purpose statute stating that the Anti-Injunction Act does not bar pre-enforcement challenges to the minimum coverage provision until that provision actually goes into effect. [read post]
14 Feb 2010, 9:14 pm by Adam Thierer
Neil Postman, Mark Helprin, Andrew Keen, and Lee Siegel have all railed against the online “mob mentality” and argued it can be at least partially traced to anonymous online communications and interactions. [read post]
17 May 2010, 5:45 pm by JB
I've made this point in my forthcoming Michigan article on the Commerce Clause, and it is a central claim of Neil Siegel and Robert Cooter's forthcoming Stanford article "Collective Action Federalism: A General Theory of Article I, Section 8" [which, unfortunately, does not seem to be currently posted on SSRN]Put differently, when a federal statute solves a genuine collective action problem, courts should give Congress the benefit of the doubt in… [read post]
26 Sep 2011, 1:00 am by INFORRM
Then there was the “Daily Telegraph’s” claim that News International paid Mr Coulson’s former deputy, Neil Wallis, for stories when Mr Wallis’ company, Chamy Media, was working for the Metropolitan Police. [read post]
23 Dec 2011, 12:29 pm by Adam Thierer
This is what always drives me batty when reading the work of Net pessimists like Neil Postman, Lee Siegel, Andrew Keen, Jaron Lanier, etc. [read post]