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L. Constitutional Theory & History (2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, forthcoming, and working papers)
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Citation List To "Citizens United And The Scope Of Professor Teachout's Anti-Corruption Principle," And To Tillman's Reply To Teachout, And To "Either/Or: Professors Zephyr Rain Teachout And Akhil Reed Amar -- Contradictions And Reconciliation", Seth Barrett Tillman
Seth Barrett Tillman
This is a citation list to "Citizens United and the Scope of Professor Teachout's Anti-Corruption Principle," and to Tillman's Reply to Teachout, and to "Either/Or: Professors Zephyr Rain Teachout and Akhil Reed Amar: Contradictions and Reconciliation."[1 December 2015]
Opening Statement, Citizens United And The Scope Of Professor Teachout’S Anti-Corruption Principle, In Tillman & Teachout, An Exchange, Seth Barrett Tillman
Opening Statement, Citizens United And The Scope Of Professor Teachout’S Anti-Corruption Principle, In Tillman & Teachout, An Exchange, Seth Barrett Tillman
Seth Barrett Tillman
This is my opening statement in a 4-part exchange between Professor Teachout and me.
Abstract: The test of great scholarship is that it changes the way people think and the way people live. That is also true for legal academic scholarship. But, for legal academics, perhaps, the greatest sign of scholarly achievement is judicial reliance upon our craftsmanship. By any of these measures, Professor Teachout’s 2009 Cornell Law Review publication, The Anti-Corruption Principle, is a success. One short year after publication, in 2010, Anti-Corruption Principle was relied upon by Justice Stevens in his Citizens United v. Federal Elections Committee dissent, …
Closing Statement, The Original Public Meaning Of The Foreign Emoluments Clause: A Reply To Professor Zephyr Teachout (2013), Seth Barrett Tillman
Closing Statement, The Original Public Meaning Of The Foreign Emoluments Clause: A Reply To Professor Zephyr Teachout (2013), Seth Barrett Tillman
Seth Barrett Tillman
This is my closing statement in a 4-part exchange between Professor Teachout and me.Abstract: The test of great scholarship is that it changes the way people think and the way people live. That is also true for legal academic scholarship. But, for legal academics, perhaps, the greatest sign of scholarly achievement is judicial reliance upon our craftsmanship. By any of these measures, Professor Teachout’s 2009 Cornell Law Review publication, The Anti-Corruption Principle, is a success. One short year after publication, in 2010, Anti-Corruption Principle was relied upon by Justice Stevens in his Citizens United v. Federal Elections Committee dissent, just …