archive

Of constitutional theory

Andrew Coan (Arizona): The Foundations of Constitutional Theory. David S. Law (Washington): Constitutional Archetypes. Neil Walker (Edinburgh): Constitutional Pluralism Revisited. Stephen Gardbaum (UCLA): Revolutionary Constitutionalism. Richard Albert (Boston College): Four Unconstitutional Constitutions and their Democratic Foundations; and Imposed Constitutions with Consent? Christian Turner (Georgia): Perceiving Law. Kenneth Einar Himma (Washington): Can There Really Be Law in a Society of Angels? Frederick Schauer (Virginia): Law's Boundaries. Nicholas W. Barber (Oxford) and Adrian Vermeule (Harvard): The Exceptional Role of Courts in the Constitutional Order. Donald E. Bello Hutt (King’s College): Against Judicial Supremacy in Constitutional Interpretation.

From In Search of Contemporary Legal Thought, ed. Justin Desautels-Stein and Christopher L. Tomlins, Christopher Tomlins (UC-Berkeley): Of Origin: Toward a History of Contemporary Legal Thought; and Umut Ozsu (Carleton): Neoliberalism and the New International Economic Order: A History of “Contemporary Legal Thought”; and Samuel Moyn (Harvard): Legal Theory among the Ruins.