Legal scholar Caleb Nelson is worried about the “pro-president” direction the Supreme Court seems to be moving toward.
Adam Liptak’s article in today’s NYT feature this essay that Caleb Nelson wrote for NYU’s Democracy Project series of 100 essays in 100 days. The title and subtitle of the article are Originalist ...
Far-right supporters of President Donald Trump and the MAGA movement are aggressively promoting what is known as "unitary executive theory" of federal governance. The theory claims that presidents, ...
As the Supreme Court seems poised to expand the president’s power, a leading scholar whose work the justices have often cited ...
Stay up-to-date with the politics team. Sign up for the Teen Vogue Take In the coming months, the Supreme Court is likely to release decisions in a number of cases that will fundamentally impact the ...
Stripped to its constitutional essence, the current government shutdown amounts to another bid to expand presidential power. How it ultimately resolves could one day be up to the six justices in ...
"Overall, it should be evident that the Constitution was a counterrevolutionary reaction to the libertarianism and ...
Part II of The Collective-Action Constitution develops a collective-action theory of the Constitution's federal structure and identifies limits of this theory. Chapter Three examines the states' ...
The Supreme Court will decide before next summer the most important case for American democracy in the almost two and a half centuries since America’s founding. In Moore v. Harper, the Court will ...
Sign up for Antisemitism Decoded, the Forward’s guide through the news and noise about Jewish safety, brought to you biweekly by investigative journalist Arno ...