Nov 22 2023 Topics Federalist Society Blog Post News 22nd Barbara K. Olson Memorial Lecture by Bari Weiss Bari Weiss On November 10, 2023, Bari Weiss, Founder and Editor of The Free Press, delivered the...
Dec 20 2023 Publication Federalist Society Review A Deeper Originalism: From Court-Centered Jurisprudence to Constitutional Self-Government Johnathan O'Neill Federalist Society Review, Volume 24 Originalism has substantially reoriented constitutional discourse since it first reemerged in response to the Warren...
Feb 24 2020 Publication The Mythical McCulloch Nelson Lund Federalist Society Review, Volume 21 A Review of The Spirit of the Constitution: John Marshall and the 200-Year Odyssey of...
Mar 16 2020 Topics Federalist Society Blog Post News Remarks from the 2020 Joseph Story Award Stephen E. Sachs Chair of the 2020 Joseph Story Award, Brendan Anderson “The constitution is the will, the...
Sep 16 2016 Publication Federalist Society Review Religious Exemptions and Third-Party Harms Thomas C. Berg Federalist Society Review, Volume 17, Issue 3 Note from the Editor: This article discusses the effect that third-party harms should have on religious...
Mar 14 2024 Topics Federalist Society • Separation of Powers Blog Post 2024 Joseph Story Award Winner: UVA Law Professor Aditya Bamzai Lee Liberman Otis The Federalist Society is delighted to announce that the winner of the 2024 Joseph Story...
May 11 2016 Publication Federalist Society Review Stormans v. Wiesman: Paths to Strict Scrutiny in Religious Free Exercise Cases Steven T. Collis Federalist Society Review, Volume 17, Issue 2 Note from the Editor: This article is about Stormans v. Wiesman, a case from the 9th...
Apr 24 2020 Publication Federalist Society Review Is Our Modern Administrative State Unmoored from the Morality of Law? Ted Hirt Federalist Society Review, Volume 21 A review of The Dubious Morality of Modern Administrative Law, by Richard A. Epstein (Manhattan Institute...
Apr 10 2024 Publication Federalist Society Review Racial Preferences in Economic Benefits: From Widely Accepted to Legally Indefensible George R. La Noue Federalist Society Review, Volume 25 As the United States began to emerge from its long history of legal segregation and...
Feb 1 2016 Publication Federalist Society Review Book Review: The Right to Try Evan D. Bernick Engage, Volume 17, Issue 1 Note from the Editor: This book review discusses the controversial concept of the constitutional “right...
Topics
22nd Barbara K. Olson Memorial Lecture by Bari Weiss
On November 10, 2023, Bari Weiss, Founder and Editor of The Free Press, delivered the...
A Deeper Originalism: From Court-Centered Jurisprudence to Constitutional Self-Government
Johnathan O'Neill
Federalist Society Review, Volume 24
Originalism has substantially reoriented constitutional discourse since it first reemerged in response to the Warren...
The Mythical McCulloch
Nelson Lund
Federalist Society Review, Volume 21
A Review of The Spirit of the Constitution: John Marshall and the 200-Year Odyssey of...
Topics
Remarks from the 2020 Joseph Story Award
Chair of the 2020 Joseph Story Award, Brendan Anderson “The constitution is the will, the...
Religious Exemptions and Third-Party Harms
Thomas C. Berg
Federalist Society Review, Volume 17, Issue 3
Note from the Editor: This article discusses the effect that third-party harms should have on religious...
Topics
2024 Joseph Story Award Winner: UVA Law Professor Aditya Bamzai
The Federalist Society is delighted to announce that the winner of the 2024 Joseph Story...
Stormans v. Wiesman: Paths to Strict Scrutiny in Religious Free Exercise Cases
Steven T. Collis
Federalist Society Review, Volume 17, Issue 2
Note from the Editor: This article is about Stormans v. Wiesman, a case from the 9th...
Is Our Modern Administrative State Unmoored from the Morality of Law?
Ted Hirt
Federalist Society Review, Volume 21
A review of The Dubious Morality of Modern Administrative Law, by Richard A. Epstein (Manhattan Institute...
Racial Preferences in Economic Benefits: From Widely Accepted to Legally Indefensible
George R. La Noue
Federalist Society Review, Volume 25
As the United States began to emerge from its long history of legal segregation and...
Book Review: The Right to Try
Evan D. Bernick
Engage, Volume 17, Issue 1
Note from the Editor: This book review discusses the controversial concept of the constitutional “right...