Search for: "Saul Cornell" Results 61 - 80 of 183
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8 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Gregory AblavskyIn their new book The Partisan Republic, Gerry Leonard and Saul Cornell offer an impressive model for how to do large-scale synthetic constitutional history that speaks to both historians and lawyers. [read post]
7 May 2020, 12:11 pm by Rick Hills
With The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founder's Constitution, Saul Cornell and Gerry Leonard have produced a tour de force of constitutional history, the central gist of which is that the constitutional founders failed to achieve their vision. [read post]
7 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Mark R. [read post]
6 May 2020, 6:30 am by Mark Graber
For the Symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Leading textbooks and scholars maintain that during the nineteenth century in theory and in practice departmentalism was the main alternative to judicial supremacy. [read post]
4 May 2020, 6:30 am by Sandy Levinson
For the Symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019).The Partisan Republic:  Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders’ Constitution, 1780-1830s, by Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, proves that you can’t always tell a book by its size or even its title. [read post]
3 May 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019). [read post]
1 May 2020, 7:00 am by Guest Blogger
Drawing on an extraordinarily diverse range of sources and literatures, Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell provide a much broader account of American constitutional politics from the 1780s to the 1830s. [read post]
30 Apr 2020, 8:00 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019).Mary Sarah BilderGerry Leonard and Saul Cornell’s fascinating book, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders’ Constitution, 1780-1830s tells the story, as I put in in a blurb, “of the unsettling transformation of… [read post]
29 Apr 2020, 7:00 am by JB
This week and next at Balkinization we are hosting a symposium on Gerald Leonard and Saul Cornell's book, The Partisan Republic: Democracy, Exclusion, and the Fall of the Founders' Constitution, 1780s-1830s (Cambridge University Press, 2019).We have assembled a terrific group of commentators, including Greg Ablavsky (Stanford), Mary Bilder (Boston College), Jud Campbell (Richmond), Johnathan Gienapp (Stanford), Mark Graber (Maryland), Mark Killenbeck (Arkansas),… [read post]
3 Feb 2020, 4:30 am by Karen Tani
Via co-organizers Saul Cornell and Jed Shugerman, we have the lineup for the Spring 2020 Fordham Constitutional History Workshop. [read post]
7 Dec 2019, 9:00 pm by Karen Tani
From The New Republic: "Don’t Embrace Originalism to Defend Trump’s Impeachment," writes Saul Cornell (Fordham University).In the New York Times, Mona L. [read post]
7 Dec 2019, 10:28 am by Howard Bashman
“Don’t Embrace Originalism to Defend Trump’s Impeachment; Liberal legal scholars are at risk of falling into a right-wing trap”: Saul Cornell has this essay online at The New Republic. [read post]
12 Sep 2019, 3:30 am by Christopher W. Schmidt
In the former category are Bernadette Meyler’s powerful critique of the Supreme Court’s reading of the history of the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause; Saul Cornell’s challenge to originalists to meet the standards of a“genuinely historical approach to reading Founding Era texts that draws on the best interdisciplinary methods available”;1 William Baude and Stephen E. [read post]
27 Aug 2019, 6:30 am by Dan Ernst
  Contributors include Saul Cornell, Kevin Sweeney, Joyce Malcolm, Priya Satia, Patrick Charles, Lois Schwoerer, and Randolph Roth.This collection of essays explores the way history itself has become a contested element within the national legal debate about firearms.The debate over the Second Amendment has unveiled new and useful information about the history of guns and their possession and meaning in the United States of America. [read post]
23 Aug 2019, 2:00 am by Paul Caron
Saul Cornell (Fordham), Don’t Ban Assault Weapons—Tax Them: A solution from the founding era might work again today. [read post]
13 Aug 2019, 2:48 pm by Guest Blogger
As Saul Cornell has argued (and of course many others as well) to the extent that originalists ground their theory on what’s offered as philosophical truth or the truth of historical method, there is much in the actual philosophy and history to raise questions about the theory. [read post]
25 Jul 2019, 5:15 pm by Howard Bashman
Saul Cornell has this article in the August 2019 issue of the Law and History Review. [read post]