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The Rise And Fall Of The "Doctrine" Of Separation Of Powers, Philip B. Kurland
The Rise And Fall Of The "Doctrine" Of Separation Of Powers, Philip B. Kurland
Michigan Law Review
As the Constitution of the United States nears its two hundredth anniversary, there is a frenzy of celebration. However awesome the accomplishment, I submit that it is no slander to recognize that the 1787 document was born of prudent compromise rather than principle, that it derived more from experience than from doctrine, and that it was received with an ambivalence in no small part attributable to its ambiguities. Indeed, its most stalwart supporters doubted its capacity for a long life. It should not be surprising, then, that even today there is disagreement over whether the Constitution of 1787 is now …
The Constitution As Mirror: Tribe's Constitutional Choices, Richard A. Posner
The Constitution As Mirror: Tribe's Constitutional Choices, Richard A. Posner
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Constitutional Choices by Laurence H. Tribe
Hyperspace, Girardeau A. Spann
Hyperspace, Girardeau A. Spann
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Supreme Court and Constitutional Democracy by John Agresto
Liberalism And American Constitutional Law, Eric Brunstad
Liberalism And American Constitutional Law, Eric Brunstad
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Liberalism and American Constitutional Law by Rogers M. Smith
Comment On Professor Van Alstyne's Paper, Henry P. Monaghan
Comment On Professor Van Alstyne's Paper, Henry P. Monaghan
Faculty Scholarship
My major difficulty with Professor Van Alstyne's paper is its incomplete character. In the end, he makes only two points: first, judges are authorized to apply "this Constitution," not to do justice; and second, judges should not lie about what they are doing. The danger is that after a while the first point sounds somewhat empty, while the actual content of the second point seems entirely parasitic on the first.