We have come a long way since Bork looked at the Privileges or Immunities Clause, and Pulliam could benefit from this scholarship.
Mark Pulliam rightly criticizes nonoriginalist judicial activism but wrongly would depart from the original meaning in other cases.
Mark Pulliam misunderstands the antagonisms that underlay section 501(c)(3) and still undergird a host of other speech restrictions.
Competitive labor markets remain far better at generating value for both employers and employees.
We needn’t romanticize Alaska. Let’s concentrate on reversing its stunted growth.
While purporting to expand one set of individual rights, Sullivan did immense harm to another.
The editors of Law & Liberty highlight some of the top pieces of the year.
Benjamin H. Barton's The Credentialed Court reveals the consequences of making the Court elite.
Book recommendations that will add some cheer to your holiday season.
The editors present the five most-read Law & Liberty book reviews of 2020.
Koestler's classic book on totalitarianism, written in 1941, anticipates the woke script of the last four years.
The editors present the five most-read Law & Liberty forum discussions of 2020.
A Law & Liberty essay collection on the life and legacy of Justice Antonin Scalia.