Volume 33

Issue 3

THE FEDERALIST SOCIETY NATIONAL
LAWYERS CONVENTION — 2009
907BEING HONEST ABOUT BEING HONEST AGENTSGuido Calabresi
915JUDGES AS HONEST AGENTSFrank H. Easterbrook
925WHY CONSERVATIVES, AND OTHERS, HAVE TROUBLE SUPPORTING THE MEANINGFUL ENFORCEMENT OF FREE EXERCISE RIGHTSAlan Brownstein
935FEDERALISM AND FAITH REDUXIra C. Lupu
943RELIGION AND ITS RELATION TO LIMITED GOVERNMENTMichael W. McConnell
953THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION AND THE WAR ON TERRORMichael B. Mukasey
ESSAY
963THE ROLE OF THE FEDERAL JUDGE UNDER THE CONSTITUTION: SOME PERSPECTIVES FROM THE NINTH CIRCUITDiarmuid F. O’Scannlain
ARTICLES
987LOVE, TRUTH, AND THE ECONOMY: A REFLECTION ON BENEDICT XVI’S CARITAS IN VERITATEJohn M. Breen
1031CAN CONGRESS OVERTURN KENNEDY V. LOUISIANA?Richard M. Ré
1107RATIONAL PLEADING IN THE MODERN WORLD OF CIVIL LITIGATION: THE LESSONS AND PUBLIC POLICY BENEFITS OF TWOMBLY AND IQBALVictor E. Schwartz & Christopher E. Appel
BOOK REVIEW
1151THE ROLE OF THE FAMILY IN CRIMINAL LAW: PRIVILEGE OR PUNISHGerard V. Bradley
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS
1177CHEVRON’S SLIDING SCALE IN Wyeth v. Levine, 129 S. Ct. 1187 (2009)
1191A RETREAT FROM DECISION BY RULE IN Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937 (2009)
1203THE DECLINE OF THE COURT OF FEDERAL CLAIMS IN Nebraska Public Power District v. United States,
590 F.3d 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2010)

Issue 2

387WHY I WILL NEVER BE A KEYNESIANRichard A. Epstein
407UNAFFORDABLE HOUSING AND POLITICAL KICKBACKS ROCKED THE AMERICAN ECONOMYDarrell Issa
421CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF THE FINANCIAL CRISIS OF 2007–2009William Poole
443SMITH VERSUS KEYNES: ECONOMICS AND POLITICAL ECONOMY IN THE POST‐CRISIS ERASamuel Gregg
465THE BANKS VERSUS THE CONSTITUTIONRon Paul
476STRAW MAN CAPITALISM AND A NEW PATH TO PROSPERITYStephen Moore & Tyler Grimm
487FREEDOM AND EQUALITY IN MARKET EXCHANGE: SOME NATURAL LAW REFLECTIONSChristopher Tollefsen
495THE CONSTITUTION AND ITS MORAL WARNINGSHadley Arkes
507THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: MORAL FAILURE OR COGNITIVE FAILURE?Arnold Kling
519THE CASE AGAINST THE FISCAL STIMULUSJeffrey Miron
531CUMULATING POLICY CONSEQUENCES, FRIGHTENED OVERREACTIONS, AND THE CURRENT SURGE OF GOVERNMENT’S SIZE, SCOPE, AND POWERRobert Higgs
557ANTITRUST IN AN ERA OF MARKET FAILUREAlan Devlin
607FACILITATING ECONOMIC RECOVERY AND SUSTAINABLE GROWTH THROUGH REFORM OF THE SECURITIES CLASS‐ACTION SYSTEM: EXPLORING ARBITRATION AS AN ALTERNATIVE TO LITIGATIONBradley J. Bondi
639THE DISTORTING INCENTIVES FACING THE U.S. SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSIONJonathan R. Macey
671THE REDUCTION OF SYSTEMIC RISK IN THE UNITED STATES FINANCIAL SYSTEMHal S. Scott
735THE SCANDAL BENEATH THE FINANCIAL CRISIS: GETTING A VIEW FROM A MORAL‐CULTURAL MENTAL MODELKevin T. Jackson
779DOES THE STATE CREATE THE MARKET—AND SHOULD IT PURSUE EFFICIENCY?Timothy Sandefur
807INTELLECTUAL HAZARD: HOW CONCEPTUAL BIASES IN COMPLEX ORGANIZATIONS CONTRIBUTED TO THE CRISIS OF 2008Geoffrey P. Miller & Gerald Rosenfeld
NOTES
841PUBLICITY RIGHTS, FALSE ENDORSEMENT, AND THE EFFECTIVE PROTECTION OF PRIVATE PROPERTY
863AN INTERPRETIVE FRAMEWORK FOR NARROWER IMMUNITY UNDER SECTION 230 OF THE
COMMUNICATIONS DECENCY ACT
885PUNISHMENT AND STUDENT SPEECH: STRAINING THE REACH OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT

Issue 1

THE TWENTY‐EIGHTH ANNUAL FEDERALIST SOCIETY NATIONAL STUDENT SYMPOSIUM
SEPARATION OF POWERS IN AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONALISM
I. Is The Separation of Powers Principle Exportable?
5IS THE SEPARATION OF POWERS EXPORTABLE?Steven G. Calabresi & Kyle Bady
17THE CASE FOR PROMOTING DEMOCRACY THROUGH EXPORT CONTROLOona Hathaway
II. Medellín v. Texas
25DEFENDING U.S. SOVEREIGNTY, SEPARATION OF POWERS, AND FEDERALISM IN MEDELLÍN V. TEXASTed Cruz
III. Confirmation Battles and Presidential Nominations
39IN PRAISE OF SUPREME COURT FILIBUSTERSJohn O. McGinnis & Michael B. Rappaport
47JUDICIAL APPOINTMENTS: CHECKS AND BALANCES IN PRACTICERachel Brand
IV. The Administrative State and the Constitution
55BURYING THE CONSTITUTION UNDER A TARPGary Lawson
73DELEGATION AND JUDICIAL REVIEWThomas W. Merrill
87DECONSTRUCTING NONDELEGATIONCynthia R. Farina
103LEGISLATIVE DELEGATION, THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE, AND THE LEGITIMACY OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE STATEPeter M. Shane
V. War Powers and the Executive
113THE WAR POWERMichael Stokes Paulsen
139CLEAR STATEMENT RULES AND EXECUTIVE WAR POWERSCurtis A. Bradley
Exchange
149THE PUZZLE OF HAMILTON’S FEDERALIST NO. 77Seth Barrett Tillman
169THE TRADITIONAL VIEW OF HAMILTON’S FEDERALIST NO. 77 AND AN UNEXPECTED CHALLENGE: A RESPONSE TO SETH BARRETT TILLMANJeremy D. Bailey
Essays on Heller
185THE RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS IN THE STATES: AMBIGUITY, FALSE MODESTY, AND (MAYBE) ANOTHER WIN FOR ORIGINALISMClark M. Neily III
203SECOND AMENDMENT REDUX: SCRUTINY, INCORPORATION, AND THE HELLER PARADOXRobert A. Levy
Articles
217ORIGINALISM AND ECONOMIC ANALYSIS: TWO CASE STUDIES OF CONSISTENCY AND COHERENCE
IN SUPREME COURT DECISION MAKING
Douglas H. Ginsburg
239REVIVING NECESSITY IN EMINENT DOMAINRobert C. Bird
283THE LONELY DEATH OF PUBLIC CAMPAIGN FINANCINGRichard M. Esenberg
Book Review
333A FAINT‐HEARTED LIBERTARIAN AT BEST: THE SWEET MYSTERY OF JUSTICE ANTHONY KENNEDYIlya Shapiro
Recent Developments
361TITLE VII’S CONFLICTING “TWIN PILLARS” IN Ricci v. DeStefano, 129 S. Ct. 2658 (2009)
375FEDERALISM BY JURY IN United States v. Fell, 571 F.3d 264 (2d Cir. 2009)
Scroll to Top