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The Soul of a Free Government: The Influence of John Adams’s A Defence on the Constitutional Convention |
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The Public Defender Movement in the Age of Mass Incarceration: Georgia’s Experience |
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“Not a Lawyer’s Contract:” Reflections on FDR’s Constitution Day Address |
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“Charlottesville” as Legal History |
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The “Cruel and Unusual” Legacy of the Star Chamber |
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Franklin’s Talmud: Hebraic Republicanism in the Constitutional Convention and the Debate Over Ratification, 1787-1788 |
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A MARvel of Constitutional Demythologizing |
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Constructing a Modern Canon for The Federalist |
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The Executive Branch and the Origins of Judicial Independence |
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Strategic Ambiguity and Article VII: Why the Framers Decided Not to Decide |
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Federalism, The Law of Nations, and The Excluded Middle |
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The Mob Lawyer’s Constitution |
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Peerless History, Meaningless Origins |
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Thomas Burke and State Sovereignty, 1777 |
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Today’s Brandeis Brief? The Fate of the Historians’ Brief Amidst the Rise of an Originalist Court |
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Abortion-Eugenics Discourse in Dobbs: A Social Movement History |
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The Wages of Crying Roe: Some Realism About Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization |
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Dobbs v. Brown |
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The Critical Role of History after Dobbs |
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Before “the Supreme Court Bail[ed] Us Out”: Feminist Claims for Abortion Rights and the Constitutional History of Roe v. Wade |
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Ida B. Wells’s Train Ride in Memphis and the Dawn of Jim Crow |
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Racism, Black Voices, Emancipation, and Constitution-Making in Massachusetts, 1778 |
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The Democracy Effects of Legal Polarization: Movement Lawyering at the Dawn of the Unitary Executive |
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Executive Power, the Royal Prerogative, and the Founders’ Presidency |
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A Body Without a Head: Revisiting James Bryce’s The American Commonwealth on the Place of the President in the 19th Century Federal Government |
Journal Article |