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BusinessWeek September 27, 2004 |
Punch, Counterpunch The roots of contemporary strife over the federal judiciary date back nearly five decades, starting with Chief Justice Earl Warren. |
BusinessWeek February 10, 2011 Paul M. Barrett |
Attack of the Commerce Clause A new assault on regulation is gathering force -- and it's deploying a constitutional weapon |
Salon.com June 29, 2000 Bruce Shapiro |
Abortion in the spotlight A narrow ruling upholding late-term abortions makes reproductive rights -- and the Supreme Court itself -- a hot issue this election year. |
Fast Company September 2004 David Brock |
Unliving a Lie In business, in politics, in journalism, in the military -- in any organization large or small -- there seem to be few incentives to stand on principle today. Speaking up for what you believe is right can be a profoundly isolating experience. |
Reason July 2005 |
Who Should Reign Supreme? Libertarian legal experts weigh in on who their favorites are--past, present, and future--on the nation's highest court. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2008 W. James Antle |
Conservatives Against Empire The forgotten tradition of the antiwar right is remembered in Bill Kauffman's latest book. |
Salon.com September 25, 2000 Bruce Shapiro |
Memo to Nader voters Anyone who doesn't think there is any difference between Bush and Gore, just think about the Supreme Court. |
Reason October 2007 Gene Healy |
Rant: Learning to Love the Imperial Presidency How conservatives made peace with executive power. |
Sports Central April 26, 2008 Jeffrey Boswell |
Sports Q&A: New Jobs For Isiah What type of job could Isiah Thomas do that wouldn't be detrimental to the Knicks organization? |
American History December 14, 2004 David J. Garrow |
The Once and Future Supreme Court The last four decades have witnessed a fundamental transformation in the types of men, and now women, who exercise the broad and untrammeled judicial power of the U.S. Supreme Court. |
BusinessWeek November 19, 2009 |
The Making of Two Anti-Reg Bulldogs Biographical data on two lawyers who would like to dismantle Sarbanes-Oxley regulations. |