Search
Now showing items 21-30 of 39
The Supreme Court and Litigation Access Fees: The Right to Protect One’s Rights — Part II
(Duke University School of Law, 1974)
"There Have to Be Four"
(University of Maryland, 2005)
Process and Property in Constitutional Theory
(EngagedScholarship@CSU, 1981)
Could property be a "process right?" "Property" does denote, among other things, a class or cluster of legal rights. In appropriate contexts, it plainly means a class or cluster of constitutional rights. But could the ...
Justice as Fairness, Legitimacy, and the Question of Judicial Review: A Comment
(Fordham Law Review, 2004)
The not so puzzling persistence of the futile search: Tribe on proceduralism in constitutional theory
(University of Tulsa College of Law, 2008)
Socioeconomic rights in constitutional law: Explaining America away
(Oxford University Press, 2008)
The apparent absence of a commitment to socioeconomic rights in United States constitutional law gives rise to continuing debate. It is unclear that this omission has any bearing on the actual performance of American ...
The Ghost of the Declaration Present the Legal Force of the Declaration of the Independence Regarding Acts of Congress
(University of South California Law Center, 2016)
I distinguish three ways by which references to the Declaration of Independence might enter into American legal argument. In primary-legal mode, the Declaration ranks as supreme law beside or above the Constitution, setting ...