Oct 29 2018 Publication Federalist Society Review Giving Credit for Shaping the Constitution Karen J. Lugo Federalist Society Review, Volume 19 A review of: The Lives of the Constitution: Ten Exceptional Minds That Shaped America’s Supreme Law,...
Mar 5 2014 Podcast Law v. Siegel - Post-Decision SCOTUScast Zvi Rosen SCOTUScast 3-5-14 featuring Zvi Rosen On March 4, 2014, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Law v. Siegel. The...
Feb 12 2016 Topics Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post News SCOTUS Issues Stay on EPA's Clean Power Plan Peter Jaffe, Daren Bakst, Nicolas Loris In a significant setback to the Obama administration’s climate agenda, five Supreme Court justices prevented...
Nov 10 2021 Topics Federalist Society • State Courts Blog Post News Evan Young Appointed to the Texas Supreme Court Marc Levin With so much focus on controversial matters now pending before the U.S. Supreme Court,...
Nov 29 2021 Publication Federalist Society Review A Change in Direction for the Federal Trade Commission? Lawrence J. Spiwak Federalist Society Review, Volume 22 While antitrust and regulation are supposed to be two sides of the same coin,[1] there...
Feb 4 2008 Publication Presidential Candidates on Judicial Philosophy John McCain, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Ron Paul Online Debate On November 4, 2008 American voters will elect the forty-fourth President of the United States....
Nov 15 2018 Video Event Videos Independent Agencies: How Independent is Too Independent? William W. Buzbee, John C. Eastman, Henry J. Kerner, Jennifer L. Mascott, Diane S. Sykes 2018 National Lawyers Convention Justice Scalia put it bluntly in Morrison v. Olson: “There are now no lines.” Morrison,...
Nov 30 2021 Topics State Courts • Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post News Book Review: Who Decides? Clint Bolick Sixth Circuit Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton is erudite, insightful, and oh so prolific. His 51...
Nov 30 2021 Blog Post News In Dobbs v. Jackson, History is On Mississippi's Side Kody Cooper, Justin Buckley Dyer This post originally appeared at Newsweek and is being republished here with permission. The Supreme...
Dec 6 2021 Blog Post Student Blog Initiative In Bruen, New York’s Scrutiny Analysis Gets It Exactly Backwards Seth Smitherman Heller famously concluded that the “inherent right of self-defense [is] central to the Second Amendment...
Giving Credit for Shaping the Constitution
Karen J. Lugo
Federalist Society Review, Volume 19
A review of: The Lives of the Constitution: Ten Exceptional Minds That Shaped America’s Supreme Law,...
Law v. Siegel - Post-Decision SCOTUScast
Zvi Rosen
SCOTUScast 3-5-14 featuring Zvi Rosen
On March 4, 2014, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Law v. Siegel. The...
Topics
SCOTUS Issues Stay on EPA's Clean Power Plan
In a significant setback to the Obama administration’s climate agenda, five Supreme Court justices prevented...
Topics
Evan Young Appointed to the Texas Supreme Court
With so much focus on controversial matters now pending before the U.S. Supreme Court,...
A Change in Direction for the Federal Trade Commission?
Lawrence J. Spiwak
Federalist Society Review, Volume 22
While antitrust and regulation are supposed to be two sides of the same coin,[1] there...
Presidential Candidates on Judicial Philosophy
John McCain, Mitt Romney, Mike Huckabee, Ron Paul
Online Debate
On November 4, 2008 American voters will elect the forty-fourth President of the United States....
Independent Agencies: How Independent is Too Independent?
William W. Buzbee, John C. Eastman, Henry J. Kerner, Jennifer L. Mascott, Diane S. Sykes
2018 National Lawyers Convention
Justice Scalia put it bluntly in Morrison v. Olson: “There are now no lines.” Morrison,...
Topics
Book Review: Who Decides?
Sixth Circuit Chief Judge Jeffrey Sutton is erudite, insightful, and oh so prolific. His 51...
In Dobbs v. Jackson, History is On Mississippi's Side
This post originally appeared at Newsweek and is being republished here with permission. The Supreme...
In Bruen, New York’s Scrutiny Analysis Gets It Exactly Backwards
Heller famously concluded that the “inherent right of self-defense [is] central to the Second Amendment...