Does originalism need a moral defense? In his newly published Vaughan Lecture, Joel Alicea argues that it does: Justifying a constitutional methodology requires arguing that judges ought to employ ...
Experts have argued that, in preparation for a surge in constitutional appeal cases, the Constitutional Court should strictly ...
The argument on Wednesday in Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy will present a remarkable spectacle of three entirely distinct constitutional challenges to wholly disparate attributes of ...
In Dissent is a recurring series by Anastasia Boden on Supreme Court dissents that have shaped (or reshaped) our country. On a Depression-era dinner table sat a can of milk that wasn’t quite milk. It ...
Most folks commenting on whether Section 3 of the 14th Amendment disqualifies Donald Trump from serving as President again approach the question as a constitutional law question. But as the question ...
One judge said the Trump administration has done “nothing” to comply with a Supreme Court ruling that it must “facilitate” the return of a wrongly deported Maryland resident from El Salvador. Another ...
The Constitutional Court’s overturning of Prime Minister Han’s impeachment helps us make some inferences about Yoon’s case – but not the obvious one. South Korea’s Constitutional Court hears final ...
After challenging the initial Utah law that created a three-judge panel to move some of the state’s highest-profile cases to a new panel of judges, the plaintiffs in Utah’s ...
A sense of urgency filled the second floor of the Duke Law School on the morning of Feb. 6., where the Duke Journal of Constitutional Law and Public Policy was hosting its annual symposium. Aptly ...
President Trump and his new administration have been hauled into court by states, advocacy groups and others over his executive orders and other administrative actions in recent weeks. Trump officials ...