Feb 1 2024 Topics Founding Era & History • Federalism & Separation of Powers Blog Post The Meaning of “Regulate Commerce” to the Constitution’s Ratifiers: An Update Robert G. Natelson Constitutional Background The constitutional justification for much of the federal regulatory and administrative apparatus rests...
Mar 6 2020 Publication Federalist Society Review New Evidence on the Constitution’s Impeachment Standard: “high . . . Misdemeanors” Means Serious Crimes Robert G. Natelson Federalist Society Review, Volume 21 Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Dec 15 2016 Publication Federalist Society Review Helping Americans to Speak Freely Jeremy B. Rosen, Felix Shafir Federalist Society Review, Volume 18 Note from the Editor: This article discusses different types of state anti-SLAPP laws and argues that...
Mar 23 2020 Publication Federalist Society Review To Bear Arms for Self-Defense: A “Right of the People” or a Privilege of the Few? Part 1 Stephen P. Halbrook Federalist Society Review, Volume 21 Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Mar 31 2020 Topics Civil Rights • Constitution • Founding Era & History • Second Amendment Blog Post News Second Amendment Historian Stephen Halbrook Demonstrates that Americans Have—and Always Had—a Fundamental Right to Carry Firearms Outside of the Home Mark W. Smith Stephen Halbrook’s recent, important paper in the Federalist Society Review, To Bear Arms for Self-Defense:...
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 31 2020 Publication Federalist Society Review To Bear Arms for Self-Defense: A “Right of the People” or a Privilege of the Few? Part 2 Stephen P. Halbrook Federalist Society Review, Volume 21 Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Jun 2 2016 Publication Federalist Society Review Evenwel v. Abbott: The Court Shanks Its Punt on “One Person, One Vote” Ilya Shapiro, Thomas Berry Federalist Society Review, Volume 17, Issue 2 Note from the Editor: This article criticizes the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Evenwel v....
Apr 3 2024 Publication State Court Docket Watch Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Sides with Government in Nondelegation Case Eli Nachmany In Robinhood Financial LLC v. Secretary of Commonwealth, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court sided...
Dec 17 2015 Publication Federalist Society Review Power Failures: Prosecution, Power, and Problems Ronald A. Cass Engage Volume 16, Issue 3 I. Introduction: Prosecution, Power, and Problems Prosecutors wield an awesome power. They make the first...
Topics
The Meaning of “Regulate Commerce” to the Constitution’s Ratifiers: An Update
Constitutional Background The constitutional justification for much of the federal regulatory and administrative apparatus rests...
New Evidence on the Constitution’s Impeachment Standard: “high . . . Misdemeanors” Means Serious Crimes
Robert G. Natelson
Federalist Society Review, Volume 21
Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Helping Americans to Speak Freely
Jeremy B. Rosen, Felix Shafir
Federalist Society Review, Volume 18
Note from the Editor: This article discusses different types of state anti-SLAPP laws and argues that...
To Bear Arms for Self-Defense: A “Right of the People” or a Privilege of the Few? Part 1
Stephen P. Halbrook
Federalist Society Review, Volume 21
Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Topics
Second Amendment Historian Stephen Halbrook Demonstrates that Americans Have—and Always Had—a Fundamental Right to Carry Firearms Outside of the Home
Stephen Halbrook’s recent, important paper in the Federalist Society Review, To Bear Arms for Self-Defense:...
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...
To Bear Arms for Self-Defense: A “Right of the People” or a Privilege of the Few? Part 2
Stephen P. Halbrook
Federalist Society Review, Volume 21
Note from the Editor: The Federalist Society takes no positions on particular legal and public...
Evenwel v. Abbott: The Court Shanks Its Punt on “One Person, One Vote”
Ilya Shapiro, Thomas Berry
Federalist Society Review, Volume 17, Issue 2
Note from the Editor: This article criticizes the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Evenwel v....
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Sides with Government in Nondelegation Case
Eli Nachmany
In Robinhood Financial LLC v. Secretary of Commonwealth, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court sided...
Power Failures: Prosecution, Power, and Problems
Ronald A. Cass
Engage Volume 16, Issue 3
I. Introduction: Prosecution, Power, and Problems Prosecutors wield an awesome power. They make the first...