8 research outputs found

    Judicial Competence and Fundamental Rights

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    In the April 1979 issue of the Michigan Law Review, Professor Ira Lupu added his valuable contribution to the continuing debate on the problem of defining the nature of fundamental rights under the Constitution. In many respects his article is a wholly admirable piece of scholarship, both well-researched and carefully reasoned. However, on one issue - the question of judicial competence to identify the values he defines as fundamental - Professor Lupu\u27s discussion is seriously deficient. This letter will examine the problem of judicial competence and conclude that it is fatal to Professor Lupu\u27s conception of the appropriate role of the Court under the due process and equal protection clauses

    Nationalizing the Bill of Rights: The Rise, Fall, and Rise of the Fourteenth Amendment Incorporation Doctrine (Book Manuscript, Introduction and Chapters 1 and 2, May 2006 Draft)

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    Slaughter-House Five: Views of the Case

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    Experiential and Informational Knowledge, Architectural Marketing Capabilities, and the Adaptive Performance of Export Ventures: A Cross-National Study

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    Public Policy and Setting Aside Patently Illegal Arbitral Awards in India

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    1994 Annual Selected Bibliography: Asian American Studies and the Crisis of Practice

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