Public Health Law & Policy Implications: Justice Kavanaugh
In: Hodge JG, Parmet W, Benjamin G, Somers S, Gulinson CL. Public health law and policy implications concerning Justice Kavanaugh. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics. 2019; 47(S2): 59-62.
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In: Hodge JG, Parmet W, Benjamin G, Somers S, Gulinson CL. Public health law and policy implications concerning Justice Kavanaugh. Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics. 2019; 47(S2): 59-62.
SSRN
Blog: Reason.com
A careful textualist analysis that speaks more broadly to other substantive canons, including Chevron deference.
Blog: Reason.com
The Supreme Court's docket may be awfully small, but it's not Justice Kavanaugh's fault.
Blog: Reason.com
Not all of the justices are happy about the Court's stingy approach to certiorari.
Blog: Reason.com
On Friday, I wrote a post that totaled nearly 6,000 words about the New York Times bombshell report on Dobbs. My initial goal was to simply lay out all of the new disclosures--and there were many of them. Now, I've had some time to think about this new information. Here, I will offer ten reflections…
Blog: Reason.com
"Across America, survivors of domestic abuse will now wait in fear to see whether Justice Kavanaugh..."
Blog: Reason.com
The good, the bad, and the ugly.
Blog: Reason.com
Why did Jonathan Mitchell not vigorously defend Griffin's Case and Chief Justice Chase? And Mitchell missed Justice Barrett's question about direct/collateral challenges due to his refusal to accept the sword-shield dichotomy.
In: Kelley School of Business Research Paper No. 18-71
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Blog: Reason.com
Justice Kavanaugh laid out a unifying theory for the Shadow Docket.
The primary -- The list -- Complicit in evil -- Mootings, meetings, and mobs -- All hell breaks loose -- Delay, delay, delay -- Too big to fail -- Fear of flying -- Miracle -- The anteroom where it happened -- Mrs. Collins goes to Washington -- Legitimacy.
Blog: Reason.com
On Monday, the Supreme Court heard oral argument in Murthy v. Missouri. Justices Kavanaugh and Kagan--who both worked in the White House--stated that it was fairly common for government officials to "berate" the press. Justice Kavanaugh observed that "experienced government press people throughout the federal government . . .. regularly call up the media and…
Blog: Reason.com
With Justice Kavanaugh by his side, the Chief Justice is back in control.
Blog: Reason.com
Justice Kavanaugh penned a narrow decision that cobbled together a majority.
Blog: Reason.com
Questions from Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Kavanaugh and Gorsuch revisit unresolved issues from 2017-2020.