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Full-Text Articles in Law
Constitutional Adjudication: The Who And When, Henry Paul Monaghan
Constitutional Adjudication: The Who And When, Henry Paul Monaghan
Faculty Scholarship
When the newly appointed Justices of the Supreme Court assembled in the Royal Exchange Building in New York for their first session on February 2, 1790, the most farsighted individual could not have foreseen what the future held for this tribunal. Now less than a generation short of its 200th anniversary, the Court is universally acknowledged to be the final and authoritative expositor of the Constitution. Yet after almost two centuries, questions concerning this power of the Court to interpret the Constitution remain. The first set of questions centers on the substantive standards for constitutional adjudication. The second, with which …
On Privacy: Constitutional Protection For Personal Liberty, Susan Herman, L. Simonson
On Privacy: Constitutional Protection For Personal Liberty, Susan Herman, L. Simonson
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
President Nixon: Toughing It Out With The Law, William W. Van Alstyne
President Nixon: Toughing It Out With The Law, William W. Van Alstyne
Faculty Scholarship
This paper examines President Nixon's handling of the Watergate scandal, arguing that Nixon's stance of "toughing it out with the law" was a common ploy used during his administration to extend the breadth of the issue in question. This expansion deflected attention away from the issue of the Constitutional limits on a president's power and was used to justify a broad spectrum of powers Nixon exercised during his presidency.