Constitutional Law, Sixth Edition


Book Description

Constitutional Law 2021 Case Supplement




Constitutional Law, Sixth Edition


Book Description

New to the 2020 Edition: Decisions concerning subpoenas of financial information pertaining to President Trump (Trump v. Vance and Trump v. Mazars USA) Decision concerning constitutionality of Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (Seila Law v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) Decision concerning Louisiana restriction on abortion (June Medical Center v. Russo) Decisions concerning free exercise of religion (Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue; Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey Beru)




CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 2022 CASE SUPPLEMENT


Book Description

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 2022 CASE SUPPLEMENT




Constitutional Law, Sixth Edition, 2023 Case Supplement


Book Description

New to the 2023 Edition: Biden v. Nebraska (Executive Power) National Pork Producers Council v. Ross (Dormant Commerce Clause) Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College (Equal Protection) 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis (Free Speech)




Constitutional Law 2023 Case Supplement


Book Description

The 2023 Annual Supplement, like prior Supplements, includes excerpts from recent scholarship and from important new decisions of the Supreme Court—including major cases on the distribution of national powers and equality. This term reflects the continued shift in the orientation of the Court after the appointment by President Trump of three new Justices. New to the 2023 Supplement: Moore v. Harper National Pork Producers Council v. Ross Biden v. Nebraska Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College Professors and students will benefit from: Judicious excerpts of recent opinions




Constitutional Law, Fifth Edition


Book Description

The new edition of the Supplement will include the major cases from the last three Supreme Court terms. In addition to the cases in the 2018 Supplement, this year’s Supplement will include the cases from the Supreme Court’s October 2018 Term. New to the 2019 Edition: New decision about sovereign immunity: Franchise Tax Board v. Hyatt New decision about delegation of legislative power: Gundy v. United States New decision about incorporation: Timbs v. Indiana New decisions about partisan gerrymandering: Rucho v. Common Cause; Lamone v. Benesik New decisions about freedom of speech: Iancu v. Brunetti; Nieves v. Bartlett New decision about the Establishment Clause: American Legion v. American Humanist Association New decision about the enumeration clause: Dep’t of Commerce v. New York




Constitutional Law 2022 Supplement


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CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 2022 SUPPLEMENT




Constitutional Law Supplement


Book Description




Constitutional Law


Book Description

PLEASE NOTE: THE LOOSELEAF VERSION IS AVAILABLE, AS IS THE EBOOK. A THIRD EDITION WILL BE OUT FOR FALL 2021. To view or download the 2020 Supplement to this book, click here. Constitutional Law: A Context and Practice Casebook, Second Edition, offers comprehensive coverage without backbreaking bulk, and allows you to teach constitutional law your own way, without having to fight the book. Using its unique electronic "Expansion Pack" system of supplemental modules, you can customize your course while still following the book's structure. That structure is streamlined into five parts of two chapters each, which cover all the essential doctrines of Constitutional Law. The book can be used for any general Con Law course, whether offered in the first semester or later, and whether it covers governmental structure, individual rights, or both. Its comprehensive Teacher's Manual provides succinct but thorough answers for all discussion questions and offers useful guidance for new adopters and first-time Constitutional Law teachers. Referenced in the Teacher's Manual is the wealth of resources found in the Expansion Packs. These supplementary additions correspond to the chapter sections and have optional additional cases, review questions, etc. The Dropbox also has an introductory document; a copy of the 385-page casebook TM; a TM for each expansion pack; "short cuts," which are also keyed to chapter sections and summarize material a professor may not be able to cover in depth; a folder of recommended case studies; and a folder with primary documents such as the Articles of Confederation. This book is part of the Context and Practice Series, edited by Michael Hunter Schwartz, Professor of Law and Dean of the McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific.




Constitutional Law


Book Description

To view or download the 2020 Supplement to this book click here. Constitutional Law: Cases, Approaches, and Applications is a succinct and careful presentation of canonical constitutional law cases and important constitutional law statements from the political branches. Additionally, its annual supplement includes material based on recent appellate cases applying Supreme Court constitutional doctrine. Its main features include: Relatively longer excerpts of relatively fewer cases, carefully edited to preserve citations to relevant precedent. This feature allows professors to engage students about appropriate use of precedent. The book also includes note material that connects the featured cases, thus providing the students with a comprehensive explanation of the law in a manageable number of pages. Thematic, as well as topical, organization, which allows professors to explore particular jurisprudential approaches. For example, much of the equal protection material is organized around the Court's use, and eventual abandonment, of suspect class analysis. An annual supplement that, in addition to excerpting the Supreme Court's most recent constitutional law opinions, also features appellate cases applying the Court's constitutional law doctrines, in the form of excerpts, notes, or problems. This feature helps students understand how the Court's often-vague statements of constitutional law are actually applied. It also teaches the fundamental (but often-unlearned) reality that practicing lawyers need to know not just what the Supreme Court has said about a particular issue, but how the relevant lower court jurisdiction has understood that statement. Moreover, providing these cases as problems allows students to work through the implications of a Supreme Court decision in a concrete, real-life context.