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Originalism And Congressional Power To Enforce The Fourteenth Amendment, Christopher W. Schmidt
Originalism And Congressional Power To Enforce The Fourteenth Amendment, Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
The Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Divide, Christopher W. Schmidt
The Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Divide, Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
Contemporary legal discourse differentiates “civil rights” from “civil liberties.” The former are generally understood as protections against discriminatory treatment, the latter as freedom from oppressive government authority. This Essay explains how this differentiation arose and considers its consequences.
Although there is a certain inherent logic to the civil rights-civil liberties divide, it in fact is the product of the unique circumstances of a particular moment in history. In the early years of the Cold War, liberal anticommunists sought to distinguish their incipient interest in the cause of racial equality from their belief that national security required limitations on the speech …
John Montgomery Ward: The Lawyer Who Took On Baseball, Christopher W. Schmidt
John Montgomery Ward: The Lawyer Who Took On Baseball, Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
No abstract provided.
Why Broccoli? Limiting Principles And Popular Constitutionalism In The Health Care Case, Christopher W. Schmidt, Mark D. Rosen
Why Broccoli? Limiting Principles And Popular Constitutionalism In The Health Care Case, Christopher W. Schmidt, Mark D. Rosen
Christopher W. Schmidt
Crucial to the Court’s disposition in the constitutional challenge to the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was a hypothetical mandate to purchase broccoli, which Congress never had considered and nobody thought would ever be enacted. For the five Justices who concluded the ACA exceeded Congress’s commerce power, a fatal flaw in the government’s case was its inability to offer an adequate explanation for why upholding that mandate would not entail also upholding a federal requirement that all citizens purchase broccoli. The minority insisted the broccoli mandate was distinguishable.
This Article argues that the fact that all the Justices insisted on providing …
Social Movements, Legal Change, And The Challenges Of Writing Legal History (Book Review), Christopher W. Schmidt
Social Movements, Legal Change, And The Challenges Of Writing Legal History (Book Review), Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
This Essay identifies the key contributions that Tomiko-Brown Nagin’s Courage to Dissent makes to the legal history of the civil rights movement. It situates the book among several other prominent legal histories of the civil rights era and offers thoughts on the challenge of creating historical accounts that illuminate the complex intersections of legal change and social activism. The Essay argues that Courage to Dissent is among the most thorough and ambitious efforts to confront this challenge in the literature today.
Book Review (Reviewing Christopher Waldrep, Jury Discrimination: The Supreme Court, Public Opinion, And A Grassroots Fight For Racial Equality In Mississippi (2010)), Christopher W. Schmidt
Book Review (Reviewing Christopher Waldrep, Jury Discrimination: The Supreme Court, Public Opinion, And A Grassroots Fight For Racial Equality In Mississippi (2010)), Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
No abstract provided.
Book Review (Reviewing Kenneth W. Mack, Representing The Race: The Creation Of The Civil Rights Lawyer (2012)), Christopher W. Schmidt
Book Review (Reviewing Kenneth W. Mack, Representing The Race: The Creation Of The Civil Rights Lawyer (2012)), Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
No abstract provided.
The Tea Party And The Constitution, Christopher W. Schmidt
The Tea Party And The Constitution, Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
This Article considers the Tea Party as a constitutional movement. I explore the Tea Party’s ambitious effort to transform the role of the Constitution in American life, examining both the substance of the Tea Party’s constitutional claims and the tactics movement leaders have embraced for advancing these claims. No major social movement in modern American history has so explicitly tied its reform agenda to the Constitution. From the time when the Tea Party burst onto the American political scene in early 2009, its supporters claimed in no uncertain terms that much recent federal government action overstepped constitutionally defined limitations. A …
Conceptions Of Law In The Civil Rights Movement, Christopher W. Schmidt
Conceptions Of Law In The Civil Rights Movement, Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
No abstract provided.
The Sit-Ins And The State Action Doctrine, Christopher W. Schmidt
The Sit-Ins And The State Action Doctrine, Christopher W. Schmidt
Christopher W. Schmidt
By taking their seats at “whites only” lunch counters across the South in the spring of 1960, African American students not only launched a dramatic new stage in the civil rights movement, they also sparked a national reconsideration of the scope of the constitutional equal protection requirement. The critical constitutional question raised by the sit-in movement was whether the Fourteenth Amendment, which after Brown v. Board of Education (1954) prohibited racial segregation in schools and other state-operated facilities, applied to privately owned accommodations open to the general public. From the perspective of the student protesters, the lunch counter operators, and …