Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- District of Columbia v. Heller (1)
- Do handguns deter or promote crime (1)
- Effective gun control policy starts with handguns (1)
- Firearms (1)
- Gun violence (1)
-
- Handgun licensing in metropolitan areas (1)
- Ideology and national security (1)
- Individual gun rights (1)
- Individual vs. collective gun rights (1)
- Internet exceptionalism (1)
- Lawfare criticism (1)
- Legal responses to terrorism (1)
- OLC memos (1)
- Over regulation (1)
- Participant centered view (1)
- Post 9-11 legal action (1)
- Right to bear arms (1)
- Terrorist organizations (1)
- Under regulation (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Clear And Present Internet: Terrorism, Cyberspace, And The First Amendment, Peter Margulies
The Clear And Present Internet: Terrorism, Cyberspace, And The First Amendment, Peter Margulies
Law Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
True Believers At Law: National Security Agendas, The Regulation Of Lawyers, And The Separation Of Powers, Peter Margulies
True Believers At Law: National Security Agendas, The Regulation Of Lawyers, And The Separation Of Powers, Peter Margulies
Law Faculty Scholarship
Ideological agendas distort the deliberation required for sound legal advice about national security. Elite government lawyers after September 11 advanced a theory at the expense of context, labeling legal constraints as "lawfare" against American interests. The lawfare critics failed to recognize that legal constraints can empower decision makers by reinforcing reputational and other long-term values. They also failed their history test, ignoring the lessons of presidents from Jefferson to Kennedy who rejected a rigid adherence to ideology in the national security realm. By discounting context, the construction of the lawfare paradigm produced dire results, including the torture memos drafted by …
Heller And Insurrectionism, Carl Bogus
Gun Control And America's Cities: Public Policy And Politics, Carl Bogus
Gun Control And America's Cities: Public Policy And Politics, Carl Bogus
Law Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.