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Jurisdiction

William & Mary Law Review

Journal

United States Supreme Court

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Supreme Court’S Quiet Revolution: Redefining The Meaning Of Jurisdiction, Erin Morrow Hawley May 2015

The Supreme Court’S Quiet Revolution: Redefining The Meaning Of Jurisdiction, Erin Morrow Hawley

William & Mary Law Review

Over the last three decades, the Rehnquist and Roberts Courts have carried out a quiet revolution in the nature and meaning of jurisdiction. Historically, federal courts generally treated procedural requirements, like filing deadlines and exhaustion prerequisites, as presumptively “jurisdictional.” In case after case, the modern Court has reversed course. The result has been an unobtrusive but seminal redefinition of what jurisdiction means to begin with: the adjudicatory authority of the federal courts. This shift is momentous, but it has been obscured by the Court’s erstwhile imposition of a clear statement requirement. For courts to find a statutory requirement jurisdictional, Congress …


The Shrinking Forum: The Supreme Court's Limitation Of Jurisdiction - An Argument For A Federal Forum In Multi-Party, Multi-State Litigation, Allen R. Kamp Oct 1979

The Shrinking Forum: The Supreme Court's Limitation Of Jurisdiction - An Argument For A Federal Forum In Multi-Party, Multi-State Litigation, Allen R. Kamp

William & Mary Law Review

No abstract provided.