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A Global Constitutional Dialogue on Human Rights Challenges for the Judiciary in the 21st Century: Nine Challenges for Contemporary Judges British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-12-12 Michael Kirby
Article A Global Constitutional Dialogue on Human Rights Challenges for the Judiciary in the 21st Century was published on 12 Dec 2020 in the journal British Journal of American Legal Studies (Volume 9, Issue 3).
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Human Rights Challenges in Brazil: Children and Vulnerable Persons British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-10-09 Guilherme Calmon Nogueira da Gama
Abstract The vulnerability of children, the elderly and people with disabilities, as minority social groups, attracts special protection not only in Brazilian law, but also in international treaties of human rights. This Article presents an overview of this issue, and identifies the challenges related to the effectiveness of the juridical protection available to these groups.
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The Living Constitution and the (Almost) Dead Contracts Clause British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-08-04 Thomas Halper
Abstract Under pressure to adapt to changing circumstances, the contract clause, though expressed in absolute terms, may now be violated for almost any reason at all. The living Constitution, in short, has virtually killed what was once a key constitutional provision.
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Persuasive or Pipe Dream? The Potential Influence of the Feminist Judgments Project on Future Judical Decision Making British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-08-04 Kate Webber Nuñez
Abstract The Feminist Judgments Project (“FJP” or the “Project”) rewrites existing judicial opinions from a feminist perspective. This article explores whether and how the FJP's alternative jurisprudence can influence future legal decisions. The FJP seeks to change the law by revealing unconscious bias and opening judicial minds to previously unknown perspectives - a method that draws on psychological
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Oceans Apart?: The Rule of Lenity in Australia and the United States British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-08-04 Julian R Murphy
Abstract Occasionally traced back to Byzantine times, the rule that penal statutes are to be interpreted strictly in favor of the subject, also known as the rule of lenity, now finds expression in common law countries across the world. This Article compares the origins and evolution of the rule in Australia and the United States. The comparison is timely because of the current uncertainty in both jurisdictions
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Modernity, the Commons and Capitalism British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-08-04 George Skouras
Abstract The modern way of life and reflected in modern political philosophy is directed by capitalist activity of both commodities and persons. Entities that do not have commodity value are worthless to the capitalist enterprise, regardless of any intrinsic value in themselves. Modernity is capitalist modernity. Modernity has given preference for objects/commodities over persons. This paper will argue
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Innocence is Not Enough: The Public Life of Death Row Exonerations British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-08-04 Austin Sarat, Natalie Morgan, Willa Grimes, Obed Narcisse, Jeremy Thomas
Abstract Miscarriages of justice and wrongful convictions are a pervasive reality in America's criminal justice system. In this paper we examine news coverage of miscarriages of justice in the death penalty system and the release of death row inmates to understand what we call the public life of exonerations. We examine the way newspapers tell the story of exonerations and the various tilts and tendencies
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Declared War and American Victory: A Search for Effective Commitment British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-08-04 Slade Mendenhall
Abstract This Article argues that the act of formally declaring war entails a measure of explicit commitment on the part of American political actors that raises the cost of failure and motivates politicians to see engagements through to a decisive end, fulfilling the role of a contract or institutional commitment device. It argues that undeclared conflicts, lacking such a device, are more likely to
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The Brazilian Constitution: Context, Structure and Current Challenges British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-07-24 Vanice Regina Lirio do Valle
Abstract The Brazilian Constitution was enacted over 31 years ago, and it pioneered several constitutional changes in Latin America, in line with a transformational project which was to be achieved through the protection of human rights including socioeconomic rights. Three decades of this constitutional experience have highlighted aspects in which the original design has proven to be too ambitious
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Freedom of Religion in the Brazilian Supreme Court in a Period of Three Decades British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-07-14 Fernanda Duarte, Rafael Mario Iorio Filho
Abstract Judicial institutions which provide legal mechanisms for conflict resolution play an important role in maintaining the social order of complex societies. Weaknesses in the performance of their duties can contribute to social conflict developing into outright violence that will be beyond the management of law and the courts. In this sense it is strategic to study the judicial system and the
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Fear and Loathing in Legal Academia: Legal Academics’ Perceptions of Their Field and Their Curious Imaginaries of How ‘Outsiders’ Perceive It British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-05-29 Nicolette Priaulx, Martin Weinel, Willow Leonard-Clarke, Thomas Hayes
Abstract This article concerns the question of how legal academics imagine ‘outsiders’ perceive legal academia. Centralising our empirical work undertaken at a UK research intensive University which explored the attitudes, beliefs and knowledges of non-legal academics about the field of legal academia, we focus on the findings flowing from benchmarking surveys with legal academics which invited self-evaluations
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Revisiting Death’s Difference: The Philosophical Anthropology of the U.S. Death Penalty and the Impossibility of Capital Due Process British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-05-29 G.P. Marcar
Abstract Within the United States, legal challenges to the death penalty have held it to be a “cruel and unusual” punishment (contrary to the Eighth Amendment) or arbitrarily and unfairly enacted (contrary to the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments). The Eighth Amendment requires that punishments not be disproportionate or purposeless. In recent rulings, the U.S. Supreme Court has adopted a piecemeal approach
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Joseph A. Greenaway Jr. Lecture Series on Law and Justice British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-05-29 Joseph A. Greenaway
Abstract This lecture given at Birmingham City University School of Law, March 21, 2019 considers the origins of the right to silence in the jurisprudence of the Supreme Court of the United States and compares the constitutional protections against self-incrimination with those of the United Kingdom. It notes that the effect of the changes introduced by the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 and
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Directions for the Study of Masculinity: Beyond Toxicity, Experience, and Alienation British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-05-29 Dylan A. Yaeger
Abstract The relationship between the law and masculinity has not been as thoroughly examined as the relationship between the law and feminism or, more generally, between the law and gender. Yet, the reach of masculinity stretches deep into the very fiber of the law. Masculinity has for too long served as an invisible bedrock on which the law founded both its substance and method. The struggle for
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William O. Douglas and The Assault on Objectivity British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-05-29 Thomas Halper
Abstract William O. Douglas, venerated by some and reviled by others, was very much his own man, disdaining his colleagues on the bench and the work they produced. For him, the point of judging was simply to do justice. However, justice is not always self evident, and legal norms and values, like objectivity and stare decisis, are ignored at a high cost. Nor, as it turns out, was his carefully carved
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Moral Cognition in Criminal Punishment British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2020-05-29 Jason R. Steffen
Abstract Scholars often appeal to Kant in defending a retributivist view of criminal punishment. In this paper, I join other scholars in rejecting this interpretation as insufficiently attentive to Kant's wider theory of justice, particularly as found in the Rechtslehre, a section of the Metaphysics of Morals. I then turn to the Tugendlehre, where I examine analogies between Kant's treatments of morality
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Bad Company: The Corporate Appropriation of Nature, Divinity, and Personhood in U.S. Culture British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-11-28 Richard Hardack
Abstract In this article, I provide a cultural history of some of the critical predicates of corporate personhood. I track the Hobbesian lineage of the corporate form, but also the ways the corporation, ascribed with numinous agency and personhood, has filled the cultural space vacated by our transcendence of anthropomorphic notions of god and Nature. The corporation was created through the consent
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Politics and Constitutional Law: A Distinction without a Difference? British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-09-12 Robert J. McKeever
Abstract This article examines the relationship between Politics and Law in U.S. Supreme Court decision-making. It argues that three major developments in recent decades have combined to undermine the Court’s status as a legal and judicial institution, and instead define it as political actor, motivated by ideology and the personal policy predilections of the Court’s Justices. The first of these elements
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A Legacy Diminished: President Obama and the Courts British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-09-12 Clodagh Harrington, Alex Waddan
Abstract A central concern for any U.S. presidential administration is its relationship with the federal judiciary. For an administration, this relationship is potentially legacy making or breaking in two ways. First, what is the imprint that the administration leaves on the judiciary? Will a president have the opportunities and institutional capacity to change the political balance of the federal
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A Template For Enhancing The Impact of The National Academy of Sciences’ Reporting on Forensic Science British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-09-12 Amelia Shooter, Sarah L. Cooper
Abstract The National Academy of Sciences (NAS), established in 1863, is the United States’ leading science and technology think-tank, with an active commitment to advising government. Over the last 150 years, the NAS has, both independently and in conjunction with the federal government, investigated and reported on various issues of importance, ranging from space exploration and biosecurity, to STEM
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Declaration of War: A Dead Letter or An Invitation to Struggle? British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-07-19 Thomas Halper
Abstract The Constitution’s declaration of war requirement, superficially straightforward but actually full of ambiguities, originated in a fear of presidential usurpation and recklessness. Yet Congress has responded to political incentives and has declined the assertive role assigned to it. The check on usurpation and recklessness has eroded almost to the vanishing point.
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Solving Child Statelessness: Disclosure, Reporting, and Corporate Responsibility British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-07-19 Mark K. Brewer, Sue Turner
Abstract Statelessness affects around 10 million people globally, many of whom are children. Many public law initiatives to diminish and eradicate statelessness exist, yet the problem persists. This article explores the potential for the private law to contribute to a solution to this problem, leading to increased awareness of the plight of stateless children among the public, investors, governments
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Secularizing a Religious Legal System: Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction in Early Eighteenth Century England British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-07-19 Troy L. Harris
Abstract The early eighteenth-century English ecclesiastical courts are a case study in the secularization of a legal system. As demonstrated elsewhere, the courts were very busy. And yet the theoretical justification for their jurisdiction was very much a matter of debate throughout the period, with divine-right and voluntaristic conceptions vying for precedence. Placed in this context, the King’s
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Sanctuary Cities: A Study in Modern Nullification? British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-07-19 Lorraine Marie A. Simonis
Abstract Since Donald Trump’s election as President of the United States, the sanctuary movement has gained prominence as a form of resistance to federal immigration policy. Sanctuary cities and states have attempted to frustrate the Trump administration’s immigration agenda by refusing to cooperate with Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE’s) efforts to remove aliens illegally residing in the
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Normative and Institutional Dimensions of Rights’ Adjudication Around the World British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2019-07-19 Pedro Caro de Sousa
Abstract The implications of incommensurability for rights’ adjudication tend to be overlooked in much of contemporary constitutional theory. This paper criticizes the dominant “one right-answer” approach to conflicts of rights, and develops an alternative approach that is better suited to constitutional rights’ adjudication in contemporary pluralistic legal orders. It is submitted that the normative
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Posner’s Folly: The End of Legal Pragmatism and Coercion’s Clarity British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Joseph D’Agostino
Abstract Highly influential legal scholar and judge Richard Posner, newly retired from the bench, believes that law is irrelevant to most of his judicial decisions as well as to most constitutional decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court. His recent high-profile repudiation of the rule of law, made in statements for the general public, was consistent with what he and others have been saying to legal audiences
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The Curious Incident of Trump and the Courts: Interbranch Deference in an Age of Populism British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Bruce G. Peabody
Abstract Given President Donald Trump’s generally non-deferential posture towards national political and governing institutions, why hasn’t his administration produced greater tension with respect to judges, courts, and established norms of judicial independence? Increased politicization of the judiciary, deepening partisanship, and distinct attributes of the President himself all seem to set up a
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Adventures in Higher Education, Happiness, And Mindfulness British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Peter H. Huang
Abstract This Article recounts my unique adventures in higher education, including being a Princeton University freshman mathematics major at age 14, Harvard University applied mathematics graduate student at age 17, economics and finance faculty at multiple schools, first-year law student at the University of Chicago, second- and third-year law student at Stanford University, and law faculty at multiple
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Constitutional Coup? The Case that Promulgated a New Constitution for Montana British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Robert G. Natelson
Abstract This Article examines one of the most important state court cases ever decided. In Montana ex rel. Cashmore v. Anderson, the Montana Supreme Court exercised its original jurisdiction to order, by a 3-2 margin, that the state’s original constitution be replaced with one the people apparently had failed to ratify. In doing so, the court yielded to interest groups that favored replacing the original
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Fascism-lite in America (or The Social Ideal of Donald Trump) British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Ewan McGaughey
What explains the election of the 45th President of the United States? Many commentators have said that Trump is a fascist. This builds on grave concerns, since Citizens United, that democracy is being corrupted. This article suggests the long term cause, and the shape of ideology is more complex. In 1971, an extraordinary memorandum of Lewis Powell for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce urged that ‘[b]usiness
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The U.S. Constitution’s Emoluments Clauses: How History, Behavioral Psychology, and the Framers’ Understanding of Corruption All Require an End to President Trump’s Conflicts of Interest British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Don Mayer, Adam Sulkowski
Abstract The two Emoluments Clauses in the U.S. Constitution forbid federal officials from accepting “any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatsoever” from foreign or domestic governments. President Donald Trump’s business interests generate numerous opportunities to use public office for his personal benefit. This article examines the history of the Emoluments Clauses and the Framers’
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Lying and the First Amendment British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-12-31 Thomas Halper
Abstract The first amendment does not protect all speech. Should it protect lies? Some argue that the state should intervene to prevent and punish lying because the people are insufficiently rational (they are too emotional, and, therefore vulnerable) or excessively rational (they find it too costly to investigate claims and are, therefore, vulnerable). Others retort that state officials are not neutral
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Fundamental Rights in Early American Case Law: 1789-1859 British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-05-30 Nicholas P. Zinos
Abstract Fundamental Rights Law is a ubiquitous feature of modern American jurisprudence. Where did the term “Fundamental Rights” come from, and how was it applied in early American case law? This article outlines the genesis of fundamental rights law in early 17th century England and how this law developed and was applied over time. The English Bill of Rights of 1689 was the first attempt to codify
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The Holmes Truth: Toward a Pragmatic, Holmes-Influenced Conceptualization of the Nature of Truth British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-05-30 Jared Schroeder
Abstract Truth as a fundamental ingredient within the flow of discourse and the application of freedom of expression in democratic society has historically received considerable attention from the U.S. Supreme Court. Many of the Court’s central precedents regarding First Amendment concerns have been determined by how justices have understood truth and how they have conceptualized the complex relationship
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Felix Frankfurter and the Law British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-05-30 Thomas Halper
Abstract Felix Frankfurter, renowned as a public intellectual fighting for justice, became as a member of the Supreme Court a figure proclaiming his devotion to the rule of law and its corollary, judicial self restraint, even when its results conflicted with his deepest beliefs. Yet an analysis of several of his leading opinions suggests that his famous balancing tests had little to do with law. In
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Toward Natural Born Derivative Citizenship British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-05-30 John Vlahoplus
Abstract Senator Ted Cruz’s campaign for the Republican presidential nomination again raised the question whether persons who receive citizenship at birth to American parents abroad are natural born and eligible to the presidency. This article uses Supreme Court decisions and previously overlooked primary source material from the Founders, the First Congress and English and British law to show that
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Acts of State, State Immunity, and Judicial Review in the United States British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2018-05-30 Zia Akthar
Abstract The doctrine of the Act of State and State Immunity has its foundation in common law frameworks. It is settled law that there is no cause of action that will make a foreign state liable in the domestic court of another country. In the United States there has been acceptance that certain cases involve “political questions” that are non-justiciable, as they are not a “case or controversy” as
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The Harvard Law Review and the Iroquois Influence Thesis British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Erik M. Jensen
Abstract In a recent Developments in the Law chapter on the Indian Civil Rights Act, authors and editors at the Harvard Law Review seemed to take seriously the so-called “Iroquois influence thesis,” the idea that basic principles of the American government were derived from American Indian nations, in particular the Iroquois Confederacy. Although the influence thesis has acquired a life of its own
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Administrative Functions of Implementation and Adjudication Guided by Primacy of Fundamental Rights British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Ricardo Perlingeiro
Abstract This article points out the bottlenecks in the systems of administrative adjudication in Latin America and suggests that the ineffectiveness should not be blamed entirely on the judicial system and judicial procedures. Rather, the Latin-American system of administrative justice should come to terms with its judicial system of general jurisdiction, gradually reducing the jurisdiction of courts
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The Original Public Meaning of Amendment in the Origination Clause Versus the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Daniel J. Smyth
Abstract Robert Natelson recently published his article, The Founders’ Origination Clause and Implications for the Affordable Care Act, in the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy. This article argued the original understanding of the scope of the Senate’s power to amend the House of Representatives’ bills for raising revenue in the Origination Clause permits complete substitutes that are new bills
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Sentencing Disparities British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Melissa Hamilton
Criminal justice stakeholders are strongly concerned with disparities in penalty outcomes. Disparities are problematic when they represent unfounded differences in sentences, an abuse of discretion, and/or potential discrimination based on sociodemographic characteristics. The Article presents an original empirical study that explores disparities in sentences at two levels: the individual case level
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Two Concepts of Freedom in Criminal Jurisprudence British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Roni Rosenberg
Abstract The goal of this essay is to identify and discuss two aspects of liberty by examining the distinction between act and omission in criminal jurisprudence. Criminal law makes a significant distinction between harmful actions and harmful omissions and, consequently, between killing and letting die. Any act that causes death is grounds for a homicide conviction -- subject, of course, to the existence
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Marshall’s Voice British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Thomas Halper
Abstract Most judicial opinions, for a variety of reasons, do not speak with the voice of identifiable judges, but an analysis of several of John Marshall’s best known opinions reveals a distinctive voice, with its characteristic language and style of argumentation. The power of this voice helps to account for the influence of his views.
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Liberty, Equality and the Right to Marry under the Fourteenth Amendment British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-12-29 Ian Loveland
Abstract The legitimacy of recent judgments in the Supreme Court, lower federal courts and State courts which have extended the scope of the Due Process and/or Equal Protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment has been a fiercely contested controversy in legal and political circles in the USA. The controversy has been especially sharp in relation to the question of same sex marriage, and specifically
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Justices as “Sacred Symbols”: Antonin Scalia and the Cultural Life of the Law British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 Brian Christopher Jones, Austin Sarat
Abstract Perhaps no single judge in recent years has embodied the intricacies and difficulties of the cultural life of the law as much as American Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. While common law judges have traditionally acquired status—and cultural relevance—from the significance, eloquence and forcefulness of their judicial opinions, Justice Scalia took an altogether different route. Both
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Postscript: Originalism and Judicial Authority British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 Jeremy Waldron
© 2017 Jeremy Waldron, published by De Gruyter Open. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 License. Of course what one wants, in a volume like this, is a reply not by me but by Justice Scalia himself to the assessments and criticisms offered in these six essays. Sadly, that is impossible, and I shall not attempt in my comments here to channel Antonin
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One of My Favorite Judges: Constitutional Interpretation, Democracy and Antonin Scalia British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 James Allan
Abstract In this article the author explains why Antonin Scalia was one of his favourite judges. It starts by excerpting some of Justice Scalia’s most biting and funny comments, both from judicial and extra-judicial sources. Then it explains the attractions of an originalist approach to constitutional interpretation, though arguing that the intentionalist strain is preferable to Scalia’s ‘original
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Scalia’s Legacy: Originalism and Change in the Law of Standing British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 James E. Pfander
Abstract Perhaps no single Justice fashioned as many changes to the law of standing as that most gifted originalist, Antonin Scalia. It was Justice Scalia who first deployed twentieth century standing rules to invalidate a citizen suit provision; who promoted the prudential rule against the adjudication of generalized grievances to constitutional status; who pressed to constitutionalize the adverse-party
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Missed Opportunities, Good Intentions: The Takings Decisions of Justice Antonin Scalia British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 Richard A. Epstein
Abstract The late Justice Antonin Scalia sensibly pushed his powerful originalist agenda as a bulwark against activist justices of any persuasion from enacting their policy preferences into law. But while this commitment to originalism may explain what the justices should not do, it does not explain, affirmatively, how they should interpret constitutional texts in accordance with the originalist agenda
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Justice Scalia: Tenured Fox in the Democratic Hen-House? British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 Jane Marriott
Abstract This paper examines Justice Scalia’s approach to campaign finance adjudication, in particular his skepticism of legislative motive. Three distinct strands of skepticism are identified: power-grabbing, incumbent-bracing and speech-preventing. As regards democracy Justice Scalia is identified as being caught in definitional dilemma whereby his campaign finance jurisprudence appears to serve
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The Sexual Orientation Cases British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2017-05-24 Ian Loveland
Abstract This paper assesses Scalia’s contribution to a series of cases, spanning much of his thirty years tenure on the court, which addressed issues relating to sexual orientation discrimination. The argument put forward is that these cases severely undermine any claim that Scalia might make to having been a distinguished judge in an intellectual or juridical sense. The pervasive theme of Scalia’s
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Free Trade Agreements With The United States: 8 Lessons For Prospective Parties From Australia’s Experience British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Stephen R. Tully
Abstract This article identifies 8 key lessons for those States contemplating a free trade agreement with the United States (U.S.) arising from Australia’s experience. The standards of intellectual property protection under the Australia-U.S. Free Trade Agreement and their impact on pharmaceutical prices in Australia are a particular focus. Prospective parties must first conduct a national interest
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The Two Noble Kinsmen: Internal and Legal Transparency in the WTO and Their Connection to Preferential and Regional Trade Agreements British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Maria Panezi
Abstract The proliferation of Preferential Trade Agreements (PTAs) and Regional Trade Agreements (RTAs) has given rise to significant debate on the need to measure, understand and possibly regulate the impact these agreements have on the multilateral trading system under the umbrella of the World Trade Organization (WTO). This article will discuss the two Doha Transparency Mechanisms (legal transparency)
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Regulatory Coherence and Standardization Mechanisms in the Trans-Pacific Partnership British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Phoenix X. F. Cai
Abstract This article posits a new taxonomy and framework for assessing regulatory coherence in the new generation of mega-regional, cross-cutting free trade agreements. Using the Trans-Pacific Partnership as the primary example, this article situates the rise of regulatory coherence within the current trade landscape, provides clear definitions of regulatory coherence, and argues that the real engine
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The Trans-Pacific Partnership British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Tania Voon, Elizabeth Sheargold
Abstract This article provides an overview of the recently concluded Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP), a treaty the parties have described as comprehensive and ambitious, yet also representing a balance of competing interests. The article focuses on the TPP’s chapters relating to investment, services, intellectual property and regulatory coherence, each of which provides insight into the motivations
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Introduction To U.S. Free Trade Agreements British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 David A. Gantz
Abstract This introduction explores the historical changes in the trade policies of the United States (U.S.), namely, the shift from the support of multilateral rules to the embracement of regional trade agreements and provides an overview of the political and economic considerations behind the conclusion of the major U.S. free trade agreements.
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The Brave New (American) World of International Investment Law: Substantive Investment Protection Standards in Mega-Regionals British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Stephan W. Schill, Heather L. Bray
Abstract Mega-Regionals are transforming and shaping the future of international investment law, concerning both the settlement of investment disputes and the substantive disciplines governing investor-state relations. Focusing on the latter, the present article shows how Mega-Regionals depart from the so far dominant European model of investment protection by going beyond crudely worded post-establishment
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Dispute Settlement Mechanisms in U.S. FTAs with Korea, Panama, Peru and Colombia: Basic Designs, Key Characteristics and Implications British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Jaemin Lee
Abstract The United States concluded free trade agreements (FTAs) with Korea, Peru, Panama and Colombia in late 2000s. Since the four FTAs were negotiated and concluded largely contemporaneously, key traits and characteristics of the agreements are similarly formulated. In light of this, dispute settlement mechanisms (state-to-state dispute settlement proceedings, investor-state dispute settlement
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Editorial British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-12-01 Panayotis M. Protopsaltis
This article provides an overview of the recently concluded Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement (TPP), a treaty the parties have described as comprehensive and ambitious, yet also representing a balance of competing interests. The article focuses on the TPP’s chapters relating to investment, services, intellectual property and regulatory coherence, each of which provides insight into the motivations
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The Origins and Development of Judicial Recusal in Texas British Journal of American Legal Studies Pub Date : 2016-05-01 John C. Domino
Abstract In 21st century Texas, a judge’s decision to recuse from a case is based on a complex set of norms, codes and procedures intended to promote impartiality. For most of the state’s history, however, the sole ground for the removal of a judge from a case was not recusal for bias but disqualification based on rigid conditions set out in the Texas Constitution. This article examines the foundations