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Binding Authority: Unamendability In The United States Constitution—A Textual And Historical Analysis, George Mader
Binding Authority: Unamendability In The United States Constitution—A Textual And Historical Analysis, George Mader
Marquette Law Review
We think of constitutional provisions as having contingent permanence—they are effective today and, barring amendment, tomorrow and the day after and so on until superseded by amendment. Once superseded, a provision is void. But are there exceptions to this default state of contingent permanence? Are there any provisions in the current United States Constitution that cannot be superseded by amendment—that are unamendable? And could a future amendment make itself or some portion of the existing Constitution unamendable?
Commentators investigating limits on constitutional amendment frequently focus on limits imposed by natural law, the democratic underpinnings of our nation, or some other …