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Harvard Journal Of Law Public Policy Biografía y Hechos
Neil McGill Gorsuch (Denver, Colorado; 29 de agosto de 1967)[1] es un abogado y jurista estadounidense que se desempeña como juez asociado de la Corte Suprema de los Estados Unidos.[2] Fue nominado por el presidente Donald Trump para suceder a Antonin Scalia después de una vacante de un año y tomó el juramento para el puesto el 10 de abril de 2017.[3][4] Gorsuch nació y pasó sus primeros años de vida en Denver, Colorado, luego vivió en Bethesda, Maryland, mientras asistía a la Escuela Preparatoria de Georgetown. Obtuvo una Licenciatura en ciencias políticas de la Universidad de Columbia, un Doctorado en Jurisprudencia de la Universidad de Harvard, y después de ejercer la abogacía durante 15 años, recibió un Doctorado en Filosofía en Derecho de la Universidad de Oxford, a la que asistió como becario Marshall. Su tesis doctoral versó sobre la moralidad del suicidio asistido, bajo la supervisión del filósofo legal católico John Finnis[5][6][7] . De 1995 a 2005, Gorsuch estuvo en la práctica privada con el bufete de abogados de Kellog, Hansen, Todd, Figel & Frederick. Fue Fiscal General Adjunto en el Departamento de Justicia de los Estados Unidos desde 2005 hasta su nombramiento en el Décimo Circuito. El presidente George W. Bush nominó a Gorsuch a la Corte de Apelaciones del Décimo Circuito de los Estados Unidos el 10 de mayo de 2006, quien asumió el cargo de alto nivel en 2006. Gorsuch es un defensor del textualismo en la interpretación estatutaria[8] y del originalismo en la interpretación de la Constitución de los Estados Unidos. Junto con el juez Clarence Thomas, es un defensor de la jurisprudencia de la ley natural[9][10][11]. Trabajó para el juez David B. Sentelle en la Corte de Apelaciones del Circuito del Distrito de Columbia de 1991 a 1992, y luego para los jueces del Tribunal Supremo de EE. UU. Byron White y Anthony Kennedy, de 1993 a 1994. Es el primer juez del Tribunal Supremo junto a otro juez por el que una vez había sido empleado (Anthony Kennedy).[12] Temprana edad y educación Gorsuch nació el 29 de agosto de 1967 en Denver, Colorado, hijo de Anne Gorsuch Burford (de soltera McGill) y David Ronald Gorsuch. Era el mayor de tres hijos, y es un coloradense de cuarta generación. Los padres de Gorsuch eran abogados, y su madre sirvió en la Cámara de Representantes de Colorado de 1976 a 1980. En 1981, el presidente Ronald Reagan la nombró administradora de la Agencia de Protección Ambiental de los Estados Unidos, convirtiéndose en la primera mujer en ocupar ese puesto. En la cita de su madre, la familia Gorsuch se mudó a Bethesda, Maryland. Asistió a la Escuela Preparatoria de Georgetown, una prestigiosa escuela jesuita, donde era dos años menor que Brett Kavanaugh, con quien más tarde trabajaría como secretario en la Corte Suprema, y eventualmente se desempeñaría como juez de la Corte Suprema. Mientras asistía a Georgetown, Gorsuch se desempeñó como paje del Senado de los Estados Unidos a principios de la década de 1980. Se graduó de Georgetown en 1985. Después de la escuela secundaria, Gorsuch asistió a la Universidad de Columbia y se graduó cum laude en 1988 con una licenciatura en ciencias políticas . Mientras estaba en Columbia, Gorsuch fue incluido en Phi Beta Kappa. También fue miembro de la fraternidad Phi Gamma Delta. Como estudiante universitario, escribió para el periódico estudiantil Columbia Daily Spectator. En 1986, cofundó el periódico estudiantil alternativo de Columbia The Fed. Gorsuch luego asistió a la Facultad de Derecho de Harvard y recibió una beca Harry S. Truman para asistir. Fue descrito como un conservador comprometido que apoyó la Guerra del Golfo y los límites de mandato del Congreso en "un campus lleno de liberales ardientes". El expresidente Barack Obama fue uno de los compañeros de clase de Gorsuch en Harvard Law. Gorsuch fue editor del Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, y se graduó de Harvard Law en 1991 con un Juris Doctor cum laude. En 2004, Gorsuch recibió un Doctorado en Filosofía en derecho (filosofía legal) de la Universidad de Oxford , donde completó una investigación sobre el suicidio asistido y la eutanasia como estudiante de posgrado de University College, Oxford. Una beca Marshall le permitió estudiar en Oxford entre 1992 y 1993, donde fue supervisado por el filósofo de la ley natural John Finnis del University College de Oxford. En 1996, Gorsuch se casó con Louise, una inglesa y campeona ecuestre del equipo de equitación de Oxford, a quien conoció durante su estancia allí. Bibliografía Gorsuch, Neil M. (3 de septiembre de 2016). Legacy of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia (video 59:59 mins). Tenth Circuit Court Bench & Bar Conference. Colorado Springs, Colorado: C-Span. «Access to Affordable Justice: A Challenge to the Bench, Bar, and Academy». Judicature (Durham, North Carolina: Duke Law Center for Judicial Studies, Duke University School of Law) 100 (3): 46. Autumn 2016. Archivado desde el original el 2 de febrero de 2017. Consultado el 14 de febrero de 2017. «Of Lions and Bears, Judges and Legislators, and the Legacy of Justice Scalia». Case Western Reserve Law Review (Cleveland, Ohio) 66 (4): 905-20. 7 de abril de 2016. Consultado el 15 de febrero de 2017. «Thirteenth Annual Barbara K. Olson Memorial Lecture». Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy (Harvard Society for Law & Public Policy) 37 (3): 743-56. 2014. Archivado desde el original el 30 de julio de 2017. Consultado el 18 de febrero de 2017. "Effective Brief Writing", in Appellate Practice Update, 2013 (Denver: CLE in Colorado, 2013) (co-author with Nathan B. Coats, Stephanie E. Dunn, Blain D. Myhre, Jesse H. Witt). "Intention and the Allocation of Risk", in Reason, Morality, and Law: the Philosophy of John Finnis, (John Keown & Robert P. George eds.) (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013) doi 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199675500.003.0026 "A Reply to Raymond Tallis on the Legalization of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia", The Journal of Legal Medicine (2007), v. 28, pp. 327–32 doi 10.1080/01947640701554468 "The assisted suicide debate", The Times Literary Supplement, May 18, 2007. The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. 2006. ISBN 978-1-4008-3034-3. "Settlements in Securities Fraud Class Actions: Improving Investor Protections", Wash. Leg. Foundation (abril de 2005) and Andrews Class Action Litigation Reporter (agosto de 2005). "Liberals ‘N’ Lawsuits", The National Review Online (febrero dew 2005). "No Loss, No Gain", Legal Times, 31 de enero de 2005. "FTC Workshop: Protecting Consumer Interests in Class Actions, Workshop Transcript: Panel 2: Tools for Ensuring that Settlements Are 'Fair, Reasonable, and Adequate'." (Panelist), September 13–14, 2004. Transcript published at 18 Geo. J. Legal Ethics 1197. Letter to the Editor: Nonpartisan Fee Awards, Washington Post, March 18, 2004, at page A30. "The Legalization of Assisted Suicide and the Law of Unintended Cons.... Descubre los libros populares de Harvard Journal Of Law Public Policy. Encuentra los 100 libros más populares de Harvard Journal Of Law Public Policy
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Judges As Honest Agents.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyI'm here to defend the proposition that, when implementing statutes, judges should be honest agents of the enacting legislature. The honestagent part is not controversial. It isn't...
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American Exceptionalism, The War on Terror, And the Rule of Law in the Islamic World (The Federalist Society National Lawyers Convention - 2007: American Exceptionalism)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyWhen some New York Law School students first decided to organize a Federalist Society chapter many years ago, they actually asked me to be their faculty advisor. Some will say that...
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Federal "Procedural" Rules Undermine Important State Interests in Shady Grove Orthopedic Associates. P.A. V. Allstate Insurance Co.
Harvard Journal of Law&Public PolicySince the Supreme Court's decision in Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, (1) federal courts have attempted to apply state "substantive" law and federal "procedural" law when sitting in...
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The Chicago School and Exclusionary Conduct.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyOne panel is not remotely enough to discuss Robert Bork's contributions to antitrust, or even a small portion of his magnum opus, The Antitrust Paradox. (1) The essayists on this p...
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The Conservative Influence of the Federalist Society on the Harvard Law School Student Body.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy"Conservative students at Harvard Law School are a tiny and beleaguered minority." Professor Paul Bator, 19851
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Humanitarian Intervention and International Law.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyNothing seems to have divided international lawyers as much in recent years as the question of humanitarian intervention. Discussions on the subject seem to produce an explosive mi...
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Placing Unnecessary Limits on Voting and Associational Freedoms (Twenty-Fourth Federalist Society Student Symposium, Law and Freedom) (Case Note)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThe right to vote candidates of one's choice into office is at the core of representative democracy. The ability to organize on a large scale with willing groups of voters to elect...
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Law's Culture: Conservatism and the American Constitutional Order.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIn an important article on Judicial Activism and Conservative Politics, (1) Ernest A. Young argues that it is not possible to define the Rehnquist Court as consistently conservativ...
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Against Foreign Law (Twenty-Fourth Federalist Society Student Symposium, Law and Freedom)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIn recent years, several Supreme Court Justices have looked to the decisions of foreign and international courts for guidance in interpreting the U.S. Constitution. This practice h...
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Unaffordable Housing and Political Kickbacks Rocked the American Economy.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThe economic earthquake that shook the world financial markets and bankrupted seemingly invulnerable multinational corporations exposed perilous fault lines of the federal governme...
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The Decline of the Court of Federal Claims in Nebraska Public Power District V. United States, 590 F.3D 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2010).
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThe Tucker Act assigns to the Court of Federal Claims (CFC) jurisdiction over claims for money damages against the federal government. (1) As a result, the CFC traditionally had ex...
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Security Reviews of Media Reports on Military Operations: A Response to Professor Lee (William E. Lee, Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, Vol. 25, P. 743, 2002)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyProfessor William E. Lee argued in a recent article in this journal that military security reviews of media reports as practiced during the Persian Gulf War and Operation Enduring ...
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Dred Scott Revisited.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyI. It has been many years since I first wrote that the American Revolution was, at once, an event in time and an idea out of time. (1) Lincoln meant no less when he wrote that Jeff...
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The Bush Administration and America's International Religious Freedom Policy.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIn February 2002, President George W. Bush appeared at Beijing's Tsinghua University and delivered a speech that was broadcast across China. (1) A substantial portion of the Presid...
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Toward a Basal Tenth Amendment: A Riposte to National Bank Preemption of State Consumer Protection Laws.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyRecent regulations promulgated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency assert a sweeping authority to preempt a broad array of state laws, including consumer protection la...
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Seeing Government Purpose Through the Objective Observer's Eyes: The Evolution-Intelligent Design Debates.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyDebates about teaching intelligent design in public school science classes are inflaming communities across the nation. These controversies present thorny Establishment Clause ques...
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Inventing the "Right to Vote" in Crawford V. Marion County Election Board.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyAlthough it has become almost axiomatic that the franchise is a "fundamental right" (1) possessed by all Americans, it remains very much open to question whether the Constitution w...
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Pragmatism's Role in Interpretation.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyAlthough the title of this panel is in the conjunctiveOriginalism and Pragmatismpeople usually assume that we must choose originalism or pragmatism. Pragmatists, such as Justice Br...
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The Comparative Disadvantage of Customary International Law (International Rule of Law)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyInternational law is as important a topic as any to our future legal regime. International law increasingly infiltrates the domestic world. Some United States Supreme Court justice...
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Achieving Equal Treatment Through the Ballot Box. (Twenty-Seventh Annual National Federalist Society Student Symposium)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicySince the founding of the United States, the relationship between the citizens and their government has been central to the definition of our nation. We were established as a natio...
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Shareholder Activism by Public Pension Funds and the Rights of Dissenting Employees Under the First Amendment. (Twenty-Ninth Annual Federalist Society National Student Symposium: Originalism)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION We are in the midst of a sea change in the corporate governance landscape. Over the past decade, activist shareholders, public pension funds prominent among them, have...
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Public Bioethics and the Bush Presidency.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION "Bioethics" emerged in America as a field of scholarly reflection in the 1960s. (1) The field concerns itself with fundamental questions, including what it means to be...
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The Lonely Death of Public Campaign Financing.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION It may be a cliche to observe that campaign finance reform has proved conclusively that the road to perdition is paved with good intentions and that unforeseen consequ...
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A Response to Professor Primus. (Article by Richard Primus in This Issue, P. 159) (Twenty-Seventh Annual National Federalist Society Student Symposium)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyProfessor Richard Primus and I participated on a panel before the National Federalist Society Student Symposium at the University of Michigan Law School concerning the media's cove...
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Gay Sex and Marriage, The Reciprocal Disadvantage Problem, And the Crisis in Liberal Constitutional Theory (Symposium: Law and Morality)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThere is nothing unusual about constitutional controversy, but some disagreements, typified by the argument over constitutional protection for gay sex and marriage, go beyond ordin...
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Limits of Interpretivism (Twenty-Seventh Annual National Federalist Society Student Symposium)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION Justice Stephen Markman sits on the Supreme Court of my home state of Michigan. In that capacity, he says, he is involved in a struggle between two kinds of judging. O...
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The Antitrust Paradox: A Policy at War with Itself (Book Review)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIt is an honor to be invited to write about Judge Robert H. Bork's contributions to antitrust law. It is also a pleasure to join in paying tribute to Judge Bork's work. When I join...
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Science and Religion Twenty Years After Mclean V. Arkansas: Evolution, Public Education, And the New Challenge of Intelligent Design.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyI. INTRODUCTION The conventional wisdom in constitutional law is that the debate that began with the famous Scopes trial in 1925 (1) over the teaching of origins in public school s...
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An Economic Assessment of Same-Sex Marriage Laws.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThis Article argues that marriage is an economically efficient institution, designed and evolved to regulate incentive problems that arise between a man and a woman over the life c...
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Norm Change Or Judicial Decree? the Courts, The Public, And Welfare Reform (Twenty-Seventh Annual National Federalist Society Student Symposium)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThe topic for this panelthe relationship between community values and judicial decision makingcalls to mind Supreme Court cases on highprofile issues that have provoked strong crit...
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Interest Groups, Power Politics, And the Risks of WTO Mission Creep.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyTo its detractors, the WTO is an ominous international bureaucracy. (1) It is purportedly plagued by a democratic deficit that will gradually usurp the domestic regulatory prerogat...
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Originalism, Precedent, And Judicial Restraint. (Twenty-Ninth Annual Federalist Society National Student Symposium: Originalism)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThere are, in theory, ways of reconciling originalism and respect for precedent. But, in practice, these approaches have not been consistently adopted by the Roberts Court. Justice...
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In Defense of the Search and Seizure Exclusionary Rule. (Debate: Exclusionary Rules) (Federalist Society 2002 Symposium on Law and Truth)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyI. INTRODUCTION (1) About a quartercentury ago, after my coauthors and I had published the fourth edition of our criminal procedure casebook, (2) I attended a conference with A. Ke...
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Federalism in Antitrust.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicySeveral scholars have suggested that states should playa much more limited role in antitrust enforcement, especially in matters that are national or global in scope. In this paper,...
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An Empirical Analysis of Life Tenure: A Response to Professors Calabresi & Lindgren (Response to Steven G. Calabresi and James Lindgren, Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy. Vol. 29, P. 769, 2006)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION Opposition to life tenure has been steadily mounting in the legal academy, and Professors Steven Calabresi and James Lindgren are among those leading the charge. In an...
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Lopez, Morrison, And Raich: Federalism in the Rehnquist Court.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyI. FEDERALISM: VALUABLE, BUT NOT NECESSARILY JUDICIALLY ENFORCEABLE Federalism, as distinguished from pure nationalism, is an attempt to create a form of government that has the ad...
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History for the Non-Originalist (Panel II: Original and Historical Truth) (Federalist Society 2002 Symposium on Law and Truth)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIt has always seemed a perversion of language to use a name to signify what something is not, rather than what it is. (1) A name is related, in some way, to understanding and to ma...
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Marijuana Or Football (Or the Future Farmers of America): Board of Education V. Earls.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIllegal drug use by a large portion of students is an unfortunate feature of most American high schools. (1) Parents and school boards across the nation are debating the merits of ...
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Public Displays of Affection ... for God: Religious Monuments After Mccreary and van Orden.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION On March 2, 2005, the United States Supreme Court heard two cases involving the constitutionality of public displays of the Ten Commandments under the Establishment Cl...
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Retribution: The Central Aim of Punishment.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyWhen I worked for the Manhattan District Attorney's Office in the early 1980s, criminal sentences were consistently and dramatically too lenient. Though those years marked the ebb ...
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Heat Expands All Things: The Proliferation of Greenhouse Gas Regulation Under the Obama Administration.
Harvard Journal of Law&Public PolicyDuring his campaign for the White House, Barack Obama called for decisive action to address the threat of global climate change. Specifically, thenSenator Obama called for reducing...
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Rational Pleading in the Modern World of Civil Litigation: The Lessons and Public Policy Benefits of Twombly and Iqbal.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyINTRODUCTION The past few years have introduced some exciting, indeed revolutionary, changes to the world of pleading. (1) In what is traditionally a static topic of civil procedur...
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Marriage Facts.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyDo constitutional norms, particularly of equality and liberty, require the redefinition of marriage from the union of a man and a woman to the union of any two persons? In the pres...
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Maintaining the Clear and Convincing Evidence Standard for Patent Invalidity Challenges in Microsoft Corp. V. I4i Limited Partnership, 131 S. Ct. 2238 (2011).
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThe term "burden of proof" is one of the "slipperiest members of the family of legal terms," and the correct standard of proof when challenging the validity of a patent is no excep...
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Good History, Good Law (And by Coincidence Good Policy Too: Granholm V. Heald.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyWith the rise of the Internet has come the lucrative practice of online wine selling. Although in nearly every state overthecounter alcohol sales are, by law, channeled through ela...
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Does Technology Spell Trouble with a Capital "T"? Human Dignity and Public Policy.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIn recent years, human dignity has attracted considerable attention as a policy standard. From bioethics and constitutional law to torts and the regulation of the Internet, human d...
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Is the Separation of Powers Exportable?(Separation of Powers in American Constitutionalism)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyIt was a great honor for both Authors to participate in this Symposium together with Professor Juan Linz. (1) Although Professor Linz favors parliamentary government and we both fa...
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Operation Iraqi Freedom: Legal and Policy Considerations.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyOn the eve of Operation Iraqi Freedom, I was asked by Dr. Laurie Mylroie to write a 5,000word legal defense of the campaign to remove Saddam Hussein from power by force to appear i...
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Five Theses on Identity Politics (Twenty-Fourth Federalist Society Student Symposium, Law and Freedom)
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyThe kind of freedom I want to address is the most vital kind: political freedom. By that I mean the summoning and exertion of energy to engage one another on matters of collective ...
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Politics and the Principle That Elected Legislators should Make the Laws.
Harvard Journal of Law & Public PolicyAfter the revolutionaries fought under the banner of "No Taxation Without Representation," the Framers adopted a Constitution that barred any new tax unless a majority of the repre...