Volume 50, Issue 3 Federal Courts from Warren to Rehnquist and Beyond: Federalism as Theory, Doctrine, Practice, and Instrument
This issue features articles reflecting on federalism under the Warren and Rehnquist Courts, written by prominent legal scholars, including Edward A. Purcell, Jr., (New York Law School), Lynn Baker (Texas), Erwin Chemerinsky (Duke), Jesse Choper (Berkeley), and Mary Anne Case (Chicago). These articles were presented as papers at the 2005 conference of the AALS’s Federal Courts section, of which New York Law School’s Professor Edward A. Purcell, Jr., is the chair.Articles
Introduction: A Tale of (at Least) Two Federalisms
Denise C. Morgan
Evolving Understandings of American Federalism: Some Shifting Parameters
Edward A. Purcell Jr.
Effective Alternatives to Causes of Action Barred by the Eleventh Amendment
Jesse H. Choper and John C. Yoo
Reconceptualizing Federalism
Erwin Chemerinsky
Notes
Liability for Torts in Violation of International Law: No Hook Under Sosa for Secondary, Complicit Actors
Helena Lynch
The Marriage Protection Act: A Lesson in Congressional Over-Reaching
Sarah Kroll-Rosenbaum
Case Comments
Maheshwari v. City of New York
Scott Glotzer