Search for: "Will Baude" Results 281 - 300 of 1,335
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20 Sep 2021, 11:36 am by clairesg
After the Clap-In, Clinical Professor Herschella Conyers, director of the Criminal and Juvenile Justice Clinic, and Professors Emily Buss and Will Baude, delivered an introduction to intellectual life at the Law School. [read post]
16 Sep 2021, 7:07 pm by Jonathan H. Adler
Commercial Law Constitutional Law (Conspirators Eugene Volokh, Randy Barnett and William Baude are 7, 10, and 18 respectively.) [read post]
15 Sep 2021, 4:30 am by Eric Segall
Of course, a liberal Supreme Court nominee saying we are all originalists is great fodder for Baude's belief that, despite centuries of non-originalist decisions by the Supreme Court, somehow originalism is our law.All of this, in a word, is nonsense. [read post]
9 Sep 2021, 5:02 am by Marissel Descalzo
” The “shadow docket” is a phrase coined by William Baude, a professor at the University of Chicago Law School, to describe the use of emergency orders and summary decisions by the Supreme Court without full briefing and oral argument. [read post]
8 Sep 2021, 9:15 pm by Josh Blackman
What was once a clever, but obscure term in Will Baude's scholarship has become yet another fulcrum in debates about the Supreme Court. [read post]
5 Sep 2021, 11:14 am by Howard Wasserman
On an emergency episode of the Divided Arguments podcast, Will Baude and Dan Epps discuss SB8 and SCOTUS's refusal to stop enforcement pending litigation. [read post]
4 Sep 2021, 3:32 am by SHG
” No, that wasn’t Bouie, but William Baude, who raised it in the context of the Supreme Court’s rejection of a last minute stay of execution. [read post]
30 Aug 2021, 4:41 am by Eric Segall
My thoughts on that matter are revealed in this book, but the point is that the lack of transparency in the Court's opinions on the question of originalism's true force as a decision-generating device has, in fact, worsened since 2012.A major new development since 2012 has been the Roberts Court's reliance on what Professor Will Baude has called the "Shadow Docket. [read post]
18 Aug 2021, 4:30 am by Eric Segall
This mission, which he and his frequent writing partner Professor Will Baude, have been on for a while, has generated numerous essays, articles, and blog posts sometimes referred to as the “positivist turn,” or “originalism is our law” originalism. [read post]
17 Aug 2021, 6:47 pm by Gerard Magliocca
Will Baude's description of the "shadow docket" is one of the most important contributions to Supreme Court scholarship in the past decade. [read post]
17 Aug 2021, 7:15 am by Jonathan H. Adler
 In a recent episode of their otherwise excellent Supreme Court podcast, Divided Arguments, Dan Epps and Will Baude noted the two preliminary decisions of the D.C. and Sixth Circuits assessing the challenges' likelihoods of success, but also overlooked the Sixth Circuit's merits holding. [read post]
17 Aug 2021, 6:24 am by Jonathan H. Adler
[An interesting historical tidbit about the nomination of David Souter to the Supreme Court] A recent episode of Will Baude and Dan Epps' Divided Argument podcast noted an interesting episode in judicial nomination history, reported in Jan Crawford's 2007 book Supreme Conflict and highlighted on Lawyers, Guns and Money at the time. [read post]
30 Jul 2021, 8:30 am by Lyle Denniston
Second: The court struggled valiantly, and with hardly a hitch, to keep up with opinion-writing, even while closeting some of its substantive work on the “shadow docket,” in William Baude’s apt phrase. [read post]
26 Jul 2021, 9:12 am by Neil Schoenherr
Epps currently co-hosts, with William Baude, the podcast “Divided Argument,” which analyzes the high court’s decisions. [read post]
9 Jul 2021, 3:58 pm by Bruce E. Boyden
That is a question posed by a very interesting draft paper posted by Will Baude of the University of Chicago last week, “The Real Enemies of Democracy. [read post]
9 Jul 2021, 10:47 am by Howard Bashman
“Heller Survives the Corpus”: William Baude has this post at the “Second Thoughts Blog” of the Duke Center for Firearms Law. [read post]
29 Jun 2021, 1:20 pm by Ilya Somin
As co-blogger Will Baude demonstrated in a pathbreaking 2013 Yale Law Journal article (cited by the dissenters), the dominant view at the time of the Founding and for many years thereafter was that the federal government did not have a general power to use eminent domain within the states. [read post]