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Fordham Law School

2020

Due process

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Substantive Due Process And A Comparison Of Approaches To Sexual Liberty, William Council Oct 2020

Substantive Due Process And A Comparison Of Approaches To Sexual Liberty, William Council

Fordham Law Review

Over 150 years ago, Congress passed and the states ratified the Fourteenth Amendment, banning states from passing or enforcing laws based on unconstitutional classifications and protecting persons in the United States from adjudication without due process. For over one hundred years, however, courts and commentators have been fighting over the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause’s controversial protections of substantive rights. The U.S. Supreme Court has applied inconsistent methodologies to these substantive due process claims, attempting to walk a tightrope between the Court’s power to subjectively announce new rights as “fundamental” and the traditional role of the states’ plenary police powers. …


A Note On The Fordham Law Review Online Fall Issue, Novel Perspectives On Due Process, Nora Stewart Aug 2020

A Note On The Fordham Law Review Online Fall Issue, Novel Perspectives On Due Process, Nora Stewart

Fordham Law Review Online

2019 has seen extensive discussion of due process in the American public sphere. There is a cultural sense of eroding norms, of institutions and procedural protections under threat. In response to the central role of due process in the cultural discourse and to the publication of Ingrid Wuerth’s Article, The Due Process and Other Constitutional Rights of Foreign Nations, in the November Issue of our print edition, Fordham Law Review Online presents a Fall Issue comprised both of response pieces to Professor Wuerth’s Article and of Essays engaging other thorny questions about due process.