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Balkinization
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Sunday, May 18, 2008
Constitutional Borrowing, circa 1960
Mary L. Dudziak
In Thurgood Marshall’s office after his death, draped over an armchair in the morning sun, was a cloak made of monkey skin. The cloak was from Kenya, and was among the Justice’s most treasured possessions. For years, Marshall told his friends and his law clerks stories about Kenya. The cloak was a gift, he told them, from the time he was made an honorary tribal chief. But even those closest to Marshall knew little about the Kenya adventures he so keenly remembered. Labels: Africa Saturday, May 17, 2008
Grading the California same-sex marriage opinion
Andrew Koppelman
The recent California same-sex marriage case, In re Marriage Cases, 2008 WL 2051892, has drawn a lot of coverage primarily on account of its consequences: same-sex marriage is coming to California, and unless the voters overturn the result by referendum, which is doubtful, it is there to stay. This is, in itself, good (although the decision, coming half a year before a presidential election, will help John McCain mobilize his alienated base, a consequence which a lot of same-sex marriage supporters should regard as bad). But a few people are also interested in the quality of its reasoning. If you are one of those people, the following analysis is for you. The rest can stop reading. Friday, May 16, 2008
California's Gift
Ian Ayres
The California Supreme Court decision striking down the state’s ban on same-sex marriages does more than change the marriage rights of the 10% of U.S. citizens living in the Sunshine state. The decision changes the legal rights of all Americans. Same-sex couples from Kansas and Connecticut for the first time have the option to go to California and to legally marry. Thursday, May 15, 2008
Obama and the national conversation we are not having
Stephen Griffin
I hope everyone took note of the recent WaPo story about Obama volunteers running into some very ugly racial attitudes in states like Pennsylvania and West Virginia. I think President Bush gave an interview reported same day in the LA Times in which he said that race wouldn’t be an issue in the campaign unless the press made it an issue. I’m afraid the President along with the rest of us are about to receive a lesson about the persistence of bigotry and racism in a significant (though presumably minority) percentage of the voting public. The continuing political relevance of racial attitudes many think extinct is not news if you live, as I do, in Louisiana. Race relations in New Orleans (recently highlighted by Katrina) and Louisiana (highlighted by the case of the Jena Six) have been terrible for years. Here are a few thoughts informed by my southern experience on the national conversation we are not having and will likely never have. The Most Important Aspect of Today's Same-Sex Marriage Decision?
Marty Lederman
Today's California Supreme Court decision is certainly momentous, and worthy of celebration, for obvious reasons. It will, I think, come to be seen as part of the grand tradition of that Court, as exemplified by its bold 1948 decision in Perez v. Sharp, which prompted numerous states to abandon their anti-miscegenation laws, eventually leading to Loving v. Virginia. But wholly apart from the particular holding on same-sex marriage -- which is plenty important in and of itself, even if it has only a third of the precedential effect that Perez had -- it strikes me that the most significant legal development in the Court's decision is that it is (to my knowledge) the first time any state or federal court of last resort has held that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation is suspect and thus subject to strict scrutiny under a constitutional equal protection clause. See pages 95-101 of the majority opinion. There is a strong argument, I think, that the particular form of discrimination at issue here would be invalid even if viewed under a more forgiving "rational basis" lens, because there is no non-invidious, legitimate reason for the state to restrict the institution of "marriage" to single-sex couples -- which was in effect the holding of the Massachusetts Court in Goodridge.. (See pages 20-22 of this brief.) But long after the question of same-sex marriage is considered by other courts, legislatures, and popular referenda -- indeed, long after the same-sex marriage becomes ubiquitous and as unremarkable as mixed-race marriages -- the Court's holding today that all discrimination against gays and lesbians is constitutionally suspect is apt to have profound ripple effects across a wide range of different legal contexts. Indeed, if other courts were to follow it, it would require states to provide "civil unions" to same sex-couples, with equal tangible rights and benefits, even where there is for some reason a state-law carve-out for "marriage" as such. And in California itself, this particular holding will have dramatic precedential effects even if the voters were to carve out an "exception" for marriage at the ballot this fall. Here's the key, landmark holding: Why John McCain Needs The Living Constitution
Guest Blogger
J. Rebekka Bonner Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Solum on Semantic Originalism: Take Two
Stephen Griffin
I am deeply grateful to Larry Solum for responding at such comprehensive length to the eight questions I posted about his article advocating semantic originalism, a genuinely new approach to the tangled debates over constitutional interpretation (a word used here in a general sense!). He must have set some sort of record by writing what amounts to an additional short law review article. Solum’s responses, detailed on his Legal Theory blog, show that I misunderstood his theory in several respects. So by way of apology, it is clear I did not pay enough attention to his explanation of “clause meaning” (by way of including concepts like federalism within it) and still have more to understand about the “contribution thesis,” the idea that in current practice, semantic content provides rules of constitutional law. I also very much appreciate Solum's kind remarks concerning my book, American Constitutionalism. On being ashamed of one's country
Sandy Levinson
Every American should read a story in today's New York Times by Nina Bernstein aptly titled "Italian’s Detention Illustrates Dangers Foreign Visitors Face." Quite frankly, it is the kind of story one would expect to have a dateline of, say, Zimbabwe, China, the old Soviet Union, Myanmar, or Iran. Instead, it depicts our own fearful nation that has created a Kafka-esque "national security" bureaucracy that exemplifies every adage about power corrupting. The attitude of the US Government toward detainees seems all too exemplary of Roger Taney's unforgettable line about the juridical reality facing blacks in America in 1857: The had "no rights that whites were bound to respect." This is a fundamental rejection of what is best in classical liberalism, which is precisely that all individuals have rights that must be respected. Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Attempt at Show Trials--US Military--And Why it Failed
Brian Tamanaha
The following are passages from Military Judge Captain Allred’s recent findings of fact in US v. Hamdan (link to opinion can be found in Marty's post below): Monday, May 12, 2008
New Media as a Counter to Old Media Concentration
Neil Netanel
My previous posts have looked at newspapers’ decline in the face of Internet competition and have bemoaned the consequent impairment of the press’s ability to serve as a vibrant fourth estate. Here I present the other side of the coin. I argue that new media, including search engine aggregators like Google News and, indeed, peer-to-peer file swapping networks, perform a valuable First Amendment function of loosening media conglomerates’ hold and providing opportunities for a more diverse range of speakers to reach an audience. I point not just to the institutional press, but the news and entertainment media as a whole. continue reading . . . Posted 4:42 PM by Neil Netanel [link] (2) comments What Is The Nature of Law?
Brian Tamanaha
On Legal Theory Blog, Larry Solum just posted another excellent lexicon entry, this one on "The Nature of Law." As usual, his explanation is concise and informative. Solum lays out the traditional legal theory debate over "What is law?" as a contest between natural law theory and legal positivism. What Liberal Constitutionalism Has Going For It
JB
I would amend Orin Kerr's remarks about liberal constitutionalism slightly. There are three things liberal constitutionalism has going for it, three reasons why it is superior to the snake oil that Justice Scalia has recently been selling in public. Sunday, May 11, 2008
Learning to Link: The Military Commission Decision Disqualifying the Legal Adviser, Brig. Gen. Thomas Hartmann
Marty Lederman
On Saturday, the New York Times reported a major development in the military commission proceeding against Salim Hamdan, something it properly called "a new blow to the Bush administration’s troubled military commission system": On Friday, the Commission disqualified from the case Brig. Gen. Thomas W. Hartmann of the Air Force Reserve, a senior Pentagon official of the Office of Military Commissions, which runs the war crimes system, because General Hartmann had indicated that political considerations should be brought to bear on prosecution decisions, and because Hartmann had also pressed for the introduction of evidence that had been obtained by use of waterboarding and other forms of torture and cruel treatment. As the Times reported: Friday, May 09, 2008
Close Enough for State Park Historical Society Work
Michael Stokes Paulsen
Yesterday was my daughter's fourth grade class field trip! Not having a real job, I was able to go along. We bicycled down the Mississippi on a (rare) beautiful Minnesota spring day, to Fort Snelling. Among the presentations was a short talk about the Fort's "most famous residents," Dred and Harriet Scott. I listened with great interest -- and some amusement. Here is my rough paraphrase of the young guide's presentation. For Balkinization Fun: How many things are wrong with this picture? (Yes, you may participate even if you've written a book about the case.) :-) What's A Theory of Constitutional Interpretation For, Anyway?
JB
I've argued that the major constraints on judicial practice in contested constitutional cases come not from specific theories of interpretation but from institutional features of the American constitutional and political system: |