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Full-Text Articles in Law
Scalia In The Casebooks, Brian T. Fitzpatrick, Paulson K. Varghese
Scalia In The Casebooks, Brian T. Fitzpatrick, Paulson K. Varghese
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
In the time since Justice Antonin Scalia’s untimely death, much has been written about what his influence has been and what his influence will be. In this Essay, we try to quantify Scalia’s influence in law school constitutional-law curricula by studying how often his ideas are explored in constitutional-law casebooks. In particular, relative to other justices, we look at how often Scalia’s opinions (for the Court, or his separate opinions) are excerpted in the principal cases and how often he is referred to by name in the notes preceding and following the principal cases. We find that Scalia is at …
Making Preemption Less Palatable: State Poison Pill Legislation, Robert A. Mikos
Making Preemption Less Palatable: State Poison Pill Legislation, Robert A. Mikos
Vanderbilt Law School Faculty Publications
Congressional preemption constitutes perhaps the single greatest threat to state power and to the values served thereby. Given the structural incentives now in place, there is little to deter Congress from preempting state law, even when the state interests Congress displaces far exceed its own. The threat of preemption has raised alarms across the political spectrum, but no one has yet devised a satisfactory way to balance state and federal interests in preemption disputes. This Article devises a novel solution: state poison pill legislation. Borrowing a page from corporate law, poison pill legislation would enable the states to make preemption …