Cato Supreme Court Review, 2003-2004

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Mark K. Moller
Cato Institute, 25. okt. 2004 - 536 strani
Published every September in celebration of Constitution Day, the Cato Supreme Court Review brings together leading legal scholars to analyze the most important cases of the Court's most recent term. It is the first scholarly review to appear after the term's end and the only on to critique the court from a Madisonian perspective.
 

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Introduction
1
The Indivisibility of Economic Rights and Personal Liberty
9
Power and Liberty in Wartime
23
Executive and Judicial Overreation in the Guantanamo Cases
49
The Supreme Court and the Rise of the Impressionist School of Constitutional Interpretation
69
Sabri v United States and the Constitution of Leviathan
119
How Illegitimate Power Negated NonExistent Immunity
161
The Cheney Decision A Missed Chance to Straighten Out Some Muddled Issues
185
The Beat Goes On
299
Locke v Daveys Unnecessary Parsing
327
The Criminalization of Silence
357
An Assault on Di Re and the Fourth Amendment
395
The Confrontation Clause ReRooted and Transformed
439
The Supreme Court Takes a Pass on Commerce Clause Challenges to Environmental Laws
469
The Upcoming 20042005 Term
493
Contributors
509

The Alien Tort Statute and Federal Common Law in Sosa v AlvarezMachain
209
Rationing Speech to Prevent Undue Influence
245
Untitled
524
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O avtorju (2004)

Mark Moller is an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute. He was formerly editor in chief of the Cato Supreme Court Review. Moller speaks frequently about the Supreme Court on television and radio, appearing on Fox News, ABC News, CNN, Court TV, Bloomberg, BBC, National Public Radio, and CBS Radio. Prior to joining Cato, Mr. Moller was an appellate lawyer with the law firm of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, where he served on the team that successfully litigated Bush v. Gore.

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