224 research outputs found
Book Review
This review of The Supreme Court on Trial by Charles Hyneman, questions why the work’s tackling the age-old issues of the source of judicial review and its constitutionality is particularly novel or unique from other such examinations. Issue is also taken with Brown v. Board of Educaion\u27s dominance of such discussion and the book’s poor treatment of the desegregation cases
Making Sense of Desegregation and Affirmative Action
This review discusses J. Harvie Wilkinson\u27s From Brown to Bakke and its companion work, Counting by Race: Equality from the Founding Fathers to Bakke and Weber written by Terry Eastland and William J. Bennett. Wilkinson\u27s work is found to maintain a narrow focus on its specific subject of school desegregation and the Supreme Court, but it suffers from over-exaggeration and an abundance of adornment in his writing style. Counting is a provocative piece that asserts the position that the Constitution is still not color-blind, despite what many have proposed, and makes an authoritative argument for such a claim
Notes on a Bicentennial Constitution: Part I, Processes of Change
With the approach of the Bill of Rights bicentennial, this paper takes the cause for celebration as an equally important occasion for critique. This work argues that the most distinguishing aspects of our Constitution are not the Bill of Rights, federalism, and separation of powers, but rather the availability of judicial review, the political insulation of federal judges, and the limited mechanisms available for constitutional change
The ‘Competition of the Market’: “Enter the Elephant!” [A Restatement of a Most Perplexing First Amendment Conundrum]
This short essay revisits the enduring problem of “government propaganda” in the domestic marketplace of “competing ideas.” Drawing his argument from the suggestions and from strongly worded dicta by several famous twentieth century justices (most notably Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Louis Brandeis, Robert Jackson and Hugo Black), Van Alstyne suggests that the First Amendment invests every ordinary citizen with suitable standing (akin to that of a corporate shareholder) to call upon any judge bound by oath of office, as set forth in Article VI, and whose aid is thus appropriately invoked, to enjoin the government from acting as an ideological partisan).
The essay provides examples of left and right-wing use of government propaganda to provoke the reader to share the author’s concern. Does it make any sense to say that the First Amendment may forbid the government to silence unpopular views but freely allow the government itself to weigh in through its own partisan propaganda? What happened in Germany when the courts of that sophisticated nation sedulously adopted that view
Ten Commandments, Nine Judges, and Five Versions of One Amendment - The First. (“\u3cem\u3eNow\u3c/em\u3e What?”)
This article explores the variety of opinions expressed by the Justices in the two “Ten Commandments” cases, specifically Justice O’Connor’s dissent and Justice Breyer’s concurrence in Van Orden v. Perry
Book Review
This review champions the editor’s use of Mr. Justice Black’s own opinions in showcasing his emphasis of the emancipating aspects of the Constitution. This work cautions the reader to avoid relying on this compilation as an accurate depiction of the state of the law, especially considering that most of the included opinions are dissents
The O’Meara Case and Constitutional Requirements of State Anti-Discrimination Housing Laws
Against the backdrop of the highly criticized O’Meara case, this comment explores the possible rational bases a state could use to support a differentiation between publicly-assisted and unassisted home owners. This comment also addresses the question of how substantial that rational bases must be in order to survive the requirements of equal protection
The Justiciability of International River Disputes: A Study in the Case Method
This paper attempts to more accurately define the doctrine of equitable apportionment governing non-navigable use of international rivers so that practitioners of international law may more easily predict the results of future cases
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