Lecture
Time:
Law & Democracy Series Lecture with David Sloss: People v. The Court: The Next Revolution in Constitutional Law
Date:
12:00 pm –
1:00 pm
McCollum Hall Room: Room 115
1875 N 42nd St
Lincoln NE 68583
Lincoln NE 68583
Contact:
Katie Pfannenstiel, kabp@unl.edu
Please join us for this Law & Democracy Series Lecture with David Sloss, Professor of Law, Santa Clara University.
David L. Sloss is writing a book called “People v. The Court: The Next Revolution in Constitutional Law” and he will host a talk on the upcoming book.
The book presents a normative theory of judicial review that builds on John Hart Ely’s theory. Current constitutional doctrine is at odds with core constitutional values. We divide Con Law into rights issues and structural issues. Structural Con Law focuses on the division of power among government actors. That framing omits a key structural feature of the Constitution: the division of power between We The People and our government. Constitutional rights doctrine focuses on negative, individual rights. Accordingly, constitutional doctrine ignores one crucial right: the affirmative, collective right of We the People to control our government. My theory divides constitutional issues into three baskets: rights, structure, and democratic self-government.
The theory relies on a distinction between strong, weak, and deferential judicial review. In a system of strong review, judicial decisions applying the Constitution are not subject to legislative override. In a system of weak review, judicial decisions are subject to legislative override. With deferential review, courts generally defer to legislative judgments.
To register, please visit the following link https://go.unl.edu/peoplevcourt
This event is approved for 1.0 continuing education credit in Nebraska.
David L. Sloss is writing a book called “People v. The Court: The Next Revolution in Constitutional Law” and he will host a talk on the upcoming book.
The book presents a normative theory of judicial review that builds on John Hart Ely’s theory. Current constitutional doctrine is at odds with core constitutional values. We divide Con Law into rights issues and structural issues. Structural Con Law focuses on the division of power among government actors. That framing omits a key structural feature of the Constitution: the division of power between We The People and our government. Constitutional rights doctrine focuses on negative, individual rights. Accordingly, constitutional doctrine ignores one crucial right: the affirmative, collective right of We the People to control our government. My theory divides constitutional issues into three baskets: rights, structure, and democratic self-government.
The theory relies on a distinction between strong, weak, and deferential judicial review. In a system of strong review, judicial decisions applying the Constitution are not subject to legislative override. In a system of weak review, judicial decisions are subject to legislative override. With deferential review, courts generally defer to legislative judgments.
To register, please visit the following link https://go.unl.edu/peoplevcourt
This event is approved for 1.0 continuing education credit in Nebraska.
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This event originated in Law.