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Full-Text Articles in Law
Five Views Of Federalism: "Converse-1983" In Context, Akhil R. Amar
Five Views Of Federalism: "Converse-1983" In Context, Akhil R. Amar
Vanderbilt Law Review
In 1987, I published an overly long article in the Yale Law Journal entitled Of Sovereignty and Federalism. In it, I advanced a "converse-1983" model of federalism-a model that highlighted the ways in which state laws can provide remedies when federal officials violate federal constitutional rights. For example, prior to the 1971 landmark of Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Agents, citizens whose Fourth Amendment rights had been violated by federal officers had no clear federal cause of action; but state trespass law often provided a remedy, and enabled citizens to recover when their "persons, houses, papers, [or] effects" had been …
Regulation Of Water Use And Takings: A Growing Battlefield, Barton H. Thompson, Jr.
Regulation Of Water Use And Takings: A Growing Battlefield, Barton H. Thompson, Jr.
Regulatory Takings and Resources: What Are the Constitutional Limits? (Summer Conference, June 13-15)
43 pages.
Contains references.
The Regulatory Takings Doctrine: A Critical Overview, J. Peter Byrne
The Regulatory Takings Doctrine: A Critical Overview, J. Peter Byrne
Regulatory Takings and Resources: What Are the Constitutional Limits? (Summer Conference, June 13-15)
15 pages.
Federalism Myth, Fernando Laguarda
Federalism Myth, Fernando Laguarda
Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals
INTRODUCTION: The late Justice Louis Brandeis once remarked on the benefit that our system of government derives from the states acting as the "laboratories of democracy."' This remark not only implies that states should be given the discretion to experiment, it presumes that states actually have the ability to do so. In order to understand Justice Brandeis and those who have followed in his rhetorical footprints, it is important to understand federalism, which is the organizing principle of American government.
Initiative Enigmas, Richard Collins