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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Mineral Leasing Act Of 1920, Patrick H. Martin
The Mineral Leasing Act Of 1920, Patrick H. Martin
Federal Lands, Laws and Policies and the Development of Natural Resources: A Short Course (Summer Conference, July 28-August 1)
39 pages (includes sample forms).
Pages M-26; M-36; M-38; and M-40 do not contain pagination or content, and were not scanned.
Contains references (page M-1).
The Rational Basis Standard Of Equal Protection Review Of Ordinary Legislative Classifications, Edward L. Barrett
The Rational Basis Standard Of Equal Protection Review Of Ordinary Legislative Classifications, Edward L. Barrett
Kentucky Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Comparative Study Of Judicial Review Under Nationalist Chinese And American Constitutional Law, Jyh-Pin Fa
A Comparative Study Of Judicial Review Under Nationalist Chinese And American Constitutional Law, Jyh-Pin Fa
Maryland Series in Contemporary Asian Studies
No abstract provided.
Constitutional Fate, Philip Chase Bobbitt
Constitutional Fate, Philip Chase Bobbitt
Faculty Scholarship
The Mary Ireland Graves Dougherty Lectures in Constitutional Law were established in 1979 at the University of Texas School of Law in the memory of Mrs. Dougherty by her family. Professor Bobbitt delivered the inaugural series of these lectures on three evenings in April 1979. Of those in attendance, only Professor Bobbitt's students, who had witnessed the evolution of his ideas during that year, and a few colleagues with whom he must have shared his thoughts, could have expected what followed on those spring evenings in Austin. His subject was "the question of judicial review." So stated, the subject hardly …
Log-Rolling And Judicial Review, Michael J. Waggoner
Log-Rolling And Judicial Review, Michael J. Waggoner
Publications
No abstract provided.
Democracy And Distrust: A Theory Of Judicial Review, Gerard E. Lynch
Democracy And Distrust: A Theory Of Judicial Review, Gerard E. Lynch
Faculty Scholarship
John Hart Ely's Democracy and Distrust is an ambitious attempt to create a new theory of judicial review, breaking away from both "interpretivism" and "noninterpretivism" – a division Professor Ely regards as a "false dichotomy" (p. vii). The book is brilliant and provocative, so much so that one fears less that its faults will be obscured – there is little danger that polemic critics will fail to pounce on them – than that the flash of Professor Ely's reasoning and the controversy it generates will distract us from the genuine importance of the insight that powers his analysis.
Legislative Delegations Of Power And Judicial Review -- Preventing Judicial Impotence, Robert W. Martin, Jr.
Legislative Delegations Of Power And Judicial Review -- Preventing Judicial Impotence, Robert W. Martin, Jr.
Florida State University Law Review
No abstract provided.