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영문목차
Preface=xxxiii
Acknowledgments=xxxv
Editorial Notice=xxxix
The Constitution of the United States=xli
Biographical Notes on Selected U.S. Supreme Court Justices=lvii
The Supreme Court since 1789=lxxvii
I. The Constitution and the Supreme Court=1
A. Introduction : Creating a Constitution That Binds the Future=1
Note : Why(and How) Does the Constitution Bind?=2
B. The Origins of the U.S. Constitution=7
1. The Arguments over the New Constitution=9
The Federalist No. 10(Madison)=11
Note : Madisonian Republicanism=15
The Federalist No. 51(Madison)=18
Note : Madisonian Republicanism and Checks and Balances=21
Note : Madisonian Republicanism and Contemporary Constitutionalism=23
C. The Basic Framework=25
Marbury v. Madison=25
Note : Marbury v. Madison=32
Martin v. Hunter's Lessee=38
Note : Supreme Court Review of State Courts and State Laws=42
Note : Judicial Exclusivity in Constitutional Interpretation?=44
D. The Sources of Judicial Decisions : Text, "Representation-Reinforcement," and Natural Law=48
1. Text=48
District of Columbia v. Heller=48
Note : Text and "Original Public Meaning"=52
2. Structure and Improving Democratic Processes=53
McCulloch v. Maryland=53
Note : Constitutional Methodology and Interpretation in McCulloch=62
3. Natural Law and Natural Rights=65
Calder v. Bull=65
Note : Natural Law, Moral Argument, and the Supreme Court=67
E. The Power of Political Control over the Supreme Court=69
Note : Amendment, Appointment, Impeachment, and the Election Returns=70
Ex parte McCardle=75
Note : Political Control over Jurisdiction of Article III Courts=77
Note : The Power of Reprisal―General Thoughts=81
F. "Case or Controversy" Requirements and the Passive Virtues=82
1. Advisory Opinions=83
2. Standing=85
Allen v. Wright=85
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife=89
Massachusetts v. EPA=97
Note : The Law of Standing=106
Elk Grove Unified School District v. Newdow=118
Note : Prudential Standing=120
3. Political Questions=121
Baker v. Carr=121
Note : The Bases for Finding a Political Question=126
Note : The Development of Standards for Reviewing Political Fairness=138
Vieth v. Jubelirer=139
Bush v. Gore=142
Note : Political Questions and Partisan Issues=149
4. Questions of Timing―Ripeness and Mootness=153
G. The Jurisdiction of the Supreme Court=155
Note : Jurisdiction, Certorari, and the U.S. Supreme Court=155
II. Federalism at Work : Congress and the National Economy=159
A. The Values of Federalism and Some Techniques for Implementing Them=159
Note : A Government of Enumerated Powers=159
Note : The Values of Federalism=161
B. Doctrinal Fundamentals : Federalism and Judicial Review=165
Gibbons v. Ogden=165
Note : Gibbons v. Ogden=167
Hammer v. Dagenhart(The Child Labor Case)=169
Wickard v. Filbum=171
Note : Political Constraints versus Judicial Enforcement=172
C. The Evolution of Commerce Clause Doctrine : The Lessons(?) of History=179
United States v. E. C. Knight Co.=180
Houston, East & West Texas Railway v. United States(The Shreveport Rate Cases)=181
Note : Direct, Indirect, and Stream of Commerce Tests=182
Champion v. Ames(The Lottery Case)=183
Note : Prohibiting Interstate Transportation―Proper Regulation or Improper Pretext?=185
Note : The New Deal Crisis=185
A. L. A. Schechter Poultry Corp. v. United States=186
Carter v. Carter Coal Co.=188
Note : New Deal Legislation and Commerce Clause Tests in the 1930s=191
NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.=193
United States v. Darby=196
Note : The New Deal Legacy=198
Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States=199
Katzenbach v. McClung=200
Note : Federalism and Congressional Motivation=202
United States v. Lopez=203
United States v. Morrison=212
Note : Federalism after the New Deal=214
National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius=218
Note : Activity and Inactivity=239
Note : Observations on Court-Imposed Limitations on Congress's Powers=239
D. State Regulation of Interstate Commerce=240
1. The Fundamental Framework=240
Note : The Classical View=240
Note : The Modern View=242
2. Protection against Discrimination=246
Note : General Considerations=246
City of Philadelphia v. New Jersey=247
Note : Facial/Intentional Discrimination=249
C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Clarkstown=251
Note : Geographic Discrimination=255
West Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy=258
Note : The Alternative of Subsidies=260
Note : Other Doctrines Concerning Discrimination=260
Note : Concluding Observations=264
3. Facially Neutral Statutes with Significant Effects on Interstate Commerce=264
Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Commission=266
Note : Inferring Intent from Effect=267
Exxon Corp. v. Governor of Maryland=269
Note : Facially Neutral Statutes with(Merely?) Disproportionate Effects for Commercial or Social Purposes=272
Kassel v. Consolidated Freightways Corp.=273
Note : Facially Neutral Statutes with(Merely?) Disproportionate Effects for Police Power Purposes=279
Note : Taxation of Interstate Commerce=281
E. Preemption=283
Arizona v. United States=283
Notes on Preemption=288
Note : Concluding Observations=291
III. The Scope of Congress's Powers : Taxing and Spending, War Powers, Individual Rights, and State Autonomy=293
A. Regulation through Taxing, Spending, and the War Power=294
1. The Taxing Power=294
National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius=296
Note : NFIB's Discussion of the Taxing Power=301
2. The Spending Power=301
United States v. Butler=301
Note : The Spending Power and Dual Federalism=306
Steward Machine Co. v. Davis=306
Note : Conditional Spending, Coercion, and the Political Process=309
National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius=310
Note : Conditions and Coercion=320
3. The "War" Power=322
Note : Individual Rights and the War Power=324
B. Congress's Enforcement Power under the Reconstruction Amendments=325
Note : Possible Interpretations of the Section 5 Power=326
Katzenbach v. Morgan=327
Note : The Scope of Section 5=329
City of Boerne v. Flores=331
Note : The Roles of Court and Congress=334
Note : The Interaction of Congressional Enforcement Power and the Eleventh Amendment=336
Board of Trustees v. Garrett=338
Note : Congressional Power to Abrogate States' Sovereign Immunity=339
Note : Congressional Power to Regulate "Private" Action for Civil Rights Purposes=344
C. The Tenth Amendment as a Federalism-Based Limitation on Congressional Power=346
Missouri v. Holland=347
Note : Federalism and the Treaty Power=348
Note : The Modern Revival of Tenth Amendment-Based Restraints on Federal Regulation of State and Local Governments=351
Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority=352
Note : From Garcia to New York v. United States=353
New York v. United States=354
Printz v. United States=356
Note : The "Anticommandeering" Principle=358
Note : Concluding Observations on Congress's Powers=365
IV. The Distribution of National Powers=367
A. Introduction=367
The Federalist No. 47(Madison)=367
The Federalist No. 48(Madison)=368
Note : The Theory of Separation and Checks and Balances=368
B. Case Study : Presidential Seizure=370
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer(The Steel Seizure Case)=370
Note : Youngstown and the Power of the President=378
Note : The Relevance of Foreign Law=380
C. Foreign Affairs=382
1. Executive Authority=382
United States v. Curtiss-Wright Corp.=382
Dames & Moore v. Regan=384
Medellin v. Texas=386
Note : The President and Foreign Affairs=388
Note : The Allocation of Warmaking Authority=389
Note : The "War on Terror" and the Second Gulf War=390
Hamdi v. Rumsfeld=392
Note : The Interplay between the President, Congress, and the Court with Regard to the "War on Terror"=400
Note : Some Unanswered Questions=403
2. Legislative Authority=406
Note : The War Powers Resolution=406
Note : Congressional Control over Agreements with Foreign States―Treaties, Executive Agreements, and Congressional-Executive Agreements=409
D. Domestic Affairs=411
1. Executive Authority=411
United States v. Nixon=412
Note : Executive Privilege and Presidential Immunity=416
Note : The Politics of Impeachment=420
Note : The "Law" of Impeachment=421
2. Legislative Authority=424
Note : The Nondelegation Doctrine and "Quasi-Constitutional" Statutes=424
INS v. Chadha=429
Note : The Legislative Veto=434
Note : Where Do Administrative Agencies "Fit" in the Separation of Powers Scheme?=435
Bowsher v. Synar=441
Morrison v. Olson=441
Note : Congressional Control over Administrative Officials=448
Note : Distribution of National Powers―Final Thoughts=451
V. Equality and the Constitution=453
A. Slavery, Jim Crow, and the Equal Protection Principle=453
1. Slavery and the Constitution=454
State v. Post=455
Note : The Constitutionality of Slavery=457
Dred Scott v. Sandford=459
Note : Dred Scott and the Power of Judicial Review=461
2. Reconstruction and Retreat=463
Note : The Work of the Reconstruction Congress=463
Note : The Judicial Reaction=465
Plessy v. Ferguson=468
Note : Separate but Equal=471
3. The Attack on Jim Crow=472
Note : The Road to Brown=473
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka(Brown I)=476
Note : Justifications and Explanations for Brown=478
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka(Brown II)=482
Note : "All Deliberate Speed"=484
4. The Meaning of Brown=485
Note : The Initial Response to Brown=485
Note : The De Jure/De Facto Distinction and Limits on Courts' Remedial Powers=489
B. Equal Protection Methodology : Rational Basis Review=497
New York City Transit Authority v. Beazer=498
Note : Equal Treatment and Relevant Differences=501
Note : Limitations on Permissible Government Purposes=503
U.S. Department of Agriculture v. Moreno=504
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center=505
Romer v. Evans=506
Note : "Actual Purpose" Review=508
Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.=509
Note : The Means-Ends Nexus=513
Railway Express Agency v. New York=516
Williamson v. Lee Optical=517
C. Equal Protection Methodology : Heightened Scrutiny and the Problem of Race=520
1. The Origins and Rationale for Heightened Scrutiny in Race-Specific Classifications That Disadvantage Racial Minorities=521
Strauder v. West Virginia=521
Korematsu v. United States=523
Loving v. Virginia=527
Note : Doctrinal Evolution in the Scrutiny Applied to Racial Classifications=528
Note : Justifications for Strict Scrutiny of Racial Classifications=530
Note : The Structure of Strict Scrutiny=535
2. Facially Nonracial Classifications That Disadvantage Racial Minorities : When Does Heightened Scrutiny Apply?=540
Washington v. Davis=540
Note : Rational Basis Review of Non-Race-Specific Classifications=542
Note : What Constitutes a Racially Motivated Classification? : Questions of Discriminatory Purpose=544
Note : Distinctive Problems in the Administration of Criminal Justice=551
McCleskey v. Kemp=554
Note : Racial Disparities in Investigating, Charging, and Sentencing=559
3. Race-Specific Classifications Designed to Benefit Racial Minorities=562
Note : The Imposition of Strict Scrutiny=562
Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena=567
Note : The Constitutionality of "Benign" Racial Classifications=574
Grutter v. Bollinger=580
Note : The Contemporary Application of Strict Scrutiny=591
Gratz v. Bollinger=595
Note : The Special Problem of Facially Neutral but Race-Specific Voting Districts=599
Note : The "Special" Case of Indigenous People=605
Note : A Comparative Perspective=606
4. The Synthesis of Brown and Affirmative Action=608
Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School District No. 1=608
Note : Parents Involved and the Synthesis of Equal Protection Law=624
D. Equal Protection Methodology : Heightened Scrutiny and the Problem of Gender=629
1. The Early Cases=629
2. The Road to Intermediate Scrutiny=631
Reed v. Reed=631
Frontiero v. Richardson=631
Note : From Reed to Craig v. Boren―Evolution and Doctrinal Confusion=633
Craig v. Boren=637
Note : Heightened Scrutiny for Gender Classifications?=642
3. Archaic and Overbroad Generalizations versus "Real" Differences=647
United States v. Virginia=647
Note : "Real Differences" and Formal Equality=654
Nguyen v. Immigration & Naturalization Service=658
Note : The Relevance of "Real Differences"=662
Note : Gender Discrimination as a Two-Edged Sword=666
Califano v. Goldfarb=667
Califano v. Webster=669
Note : The Problem of "Benign" Gender Classifications=670
Note : Sex Discrimination Law and Constitutional Evolution=671
E. Equal Protection Methodology : The Problem of Sexual Orientation=673
Note : The Nature of the Class at Issue=673
Romer v. Evans=675
Note : The Meaning of Romer=683
Note : The Standard of Review=685
F. Equal Protection Methodology : Other Candidates for Heightened Scrutiny=696
1. Alienage=696
Sugannan v. Dougall=697
Note : Strict Scrutiny for Classifications Based on Alienage―Defining the Political Community=700
Note : Alienage and Federal Preemption=703
2. Wealth Classifications=707
Note : Defining the Class=707
Note : Wealth Discrimination and the Problem of Affirmative Rights=709
3. Other Disadvantaged Groups=714
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Center=714
Note : Evaluating the Claims of Other Disadvantaged Groups=716
VI. Implied Fundamental Rights=721
A. Introduction=721
Note : Theories of Constitutional Interpretation―"Originalism" and Its Critics=722
B. The Privileges or Immunities Clause=729
The Slaughter-House Cases=730
Note : The Demise of the Privileges or Immunities Clause=735
C. The Due Process Clause and the Incorporation Controversy=739
Note : Due Process and Incorporation=739
McDonald v. City of Chicago=741
D. Substantive Due Process : The Protection of Economic Interests and the Question of Redistribution=750
Note : The Road to Lochner=750
Lochner v. New York=753
Note : The(Alleged?) Vices of Lochner=758
Note : The Lochner Era, 1905-1934=764
Nebbia v. New York=766
West Coast Hotel Co. v. Parrish=767
Note : The Context of West Coast Hotel and the 1930s Political and Economic Climate=768
Note : The End of an Era=769
United States v. Carolene Products Co.=770
Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma=771
Ferguson v. Skrupa=772
Note : Pluralism, Naked Wealth Transfers, and the Courts=773
E. Fundamental Interests and the Equal Protection Clause=776
Skinner v. Oklahoma=776
Note : The Fundamental "Right to Have Offspring"=778
1. Voting=780
a. Denial of the "Right to Vote"=780
Harper v. Virginia State Board of Elections=781
Note : Is the Right to Vote "Fundamental"?=782
Kramer v. Union Free School District=784
Note : Kramer and Its Progeny=785
b. Dilution of the "Right to Vote"=788
Reynolds v. Sims=789
Note : Reynolds and Its Progeny=792
City of Mobile v. Bolden=795
Note : Vote Dilution and the Interests of Groups=799
c. Denial of "Access to the Ballot"=803
Williams v. Rhodes=803
Note : Williams and Its Progeny=804
2. Access to the Judicial Process=807
Griffin v. Illinois=807
Douglas v. California=807
Note : Fundamental Interests and the Criminal Justice System=808
Boddie v. Connecticut=812
Note : Access to the Judicial Process in Civil Cases=813
3. Travel=814
Shapiro v. Thompson=814
Saenz v. Roe=818
Note : The Right to Travel as a "Fundamental Interest"=819
Note : "Penalizing" the Right to Travel=820
4. Welfare=824
Dandridge v. Williams=825
Note : Dandridge and the Judicial Role in the Welfare Context=826
5. Education=828
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez=828
Note : The Rodriguez Formulation=834
Plyler v. Doe=835
Note : Plyler and the Equal Protection Clause=840
F. Modern Substantive Due Process : Privacy, Personhood, and Family=841
1. The Right of Privacy=842
Griswold v. Connecticut=842
Note : Griswold and the Right of Privacy=850
2. Abortion=854
Roe v. Wade=854
Note : The Abortion Decision=859
Maher v. Roe=866
Harris v. McRae=868
Note : The Abortion-Funding Cases=869
Note : Abortion Regulation between Roe and Casey=870
Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey=873
Note : Casey and the Role of the Court=892
Gonzales v. Carhart=893
Note : The Future of Abortion Rights=907
3. Family and Other "Privacy" Interests=909
Moore v. City of East Cleveland=909
Note : Family and Association=910
Zablocki v. Redhail=913
Note : Families, Marriage, and Tradition=915
Note : Intimate and Cultural Association=920
Bowers v. Hardwick=921
Lawrence v. Texas=922
Note : Homosexuality, Sexual Liberty, and Substantive Due Process=932
Note : Same-Sex Marriage=934
4. The Right to Die=937
Cwzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health=937
Note : The Right to Die=943
Washington v. Glucksberg=944
Note : Assisted Suicide=951
Note : Liberty, Property, and Substantive Due Process=951
G. Procedural Due Process=953
1. Liberty and Property Interests=953
Board of Regents of State Colleges v. Roth=954
Perry v. Sindermann=955
Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill=956
Note : Defining "Liberty" and "Property"=958
Note : Statutory Entitlements, Property, and Natural Liberty=959
2. What Process Is Due=962
Mathews v. Eldridge=962
Note : Balancing Tests and the Due Process Clause=966
Note : Procedural Due Process and "Legislative" Determinations=972
H. The Contracts and Takings Clauses=973
1. The Contracts Clause=973
Note : Early Interpretive Problems=973
Home Building & Loan Association v. Blaisdell=976
Note : Market Ordering and Constitutional Interpretation=979
United States Trust Co. v. New Jersey=980
Allied Structural Steel Co. v. Spannaus=982
Note : United States Trust, Spannaus, and the Nonrevival of the Contracts Clause=984
2. The Eminent Domain Clause=986
Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff=986
Note : The Public Use Requirement and the Takings Clause=988
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon=991
Miller v. Schoene=993
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City=995
Keystone Bituminous Coal Association v. DeBenedictis=1000
Note : "Takings" and the Police Power=1001
Note : Penn Central, Keystone, Takings, and Related Problems=1004
Nollan v. California Coastal Commission=1008
Note : Nollan, Unconstitutional Conditions, and Other Problems=1010
Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council=1013
Note : Lucas, the Environment, and Regulatory Takings=1020
Palazzolo v. Rhode Island=1022
Note : Palazzolo―Final Thoughts=1026
VII. Freedom of Expression=1027
A. Introduction=1027
Note : The History of Free Expression=1027
Note : The Philosophy of Free Expression=1032
Note : Organization=1037
B. Content-Based Restrictions : Dangerous Ideas and Information=1038
1. Speech That "Causes" Unlawful Conduct=1038
Shaffer v. United States=1039
Masses Publishing Co. v. Patten=1040
Schenck v. United States=1043
Note : Shaffer, Masses, and Schenck=1044
Frohwerk v. United States=1047
Debs v. United States=1047
Abrams v. United States=1048
Note : Abrams and the Emergence of the Holmes-Brandeis Tradition=1051
Gitlow v. New York=1053
Note : "Abstract Doctrine" versus "Urging to Action"=1056
Whitney v. California=1057
Note : The Brandeis Concurrence and the Road to Dennis=1060
Dennis v. United States=1062
Note : Dennis and the Communist "Conspiracy"=1067
Note : The Road to Brandenburg=1070
Brandenburg v. Ohio=1072
Note : The Brandenburg Formulation=1074
Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project=1076
Note : Abridgment of Speech Other Than by Direct Criminal Prohibition=1078
2. Speech That Provokes a Hostile Audience Reaction=1083
Terminiello v. Chicago=1083
Cantwell v. Connecticut=1084
Feiner v. New York=1085
Note : The Search for Mechanisms of Control=1088
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire=1091
Note : Fighting Words=1093
Note : The Skokie Controversy=1096
Snyder v. Phelps=1098
3. Classified Information=1100
New York Times Co. v. United States ; United States v. Washington Post Co.=1100
Note : The Pentagon Papers Controversy=1108
Note : The Progressive Controversy=1112
Note : The WikiLeaks Controversy=1114
Note : Dangerous Ideas and Information―Final Thoughts=1115
C. Overbreadth, Vagueness, and Prior Restraint=1116
1. Overbreadth and Vagueness=1116
Gooding v. Wilson=1116
Note : Overbreadth=1119
Note : Vagueness=1122
2. Prior Restraint=1124
Lovell v. Griffin=1125
Note : Licensing as Prior Restraint=1126
Near v. Minnesota=1129
Note : Injunction as Prior Restraint=1131
D. Content-Based Restrictions : "Low" Value=1134
1. False Statements of Fact=1135
New York Times v. Sullivan=1135
Note : "The Central Meaning" of New York Times v. Sullivan=1140
Curtis Publishing Co. v. Butts ; Associated Press v. Walker=1143
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.=1144
Note : Public and Private Figures, Public and Private Speech=1146
Dun & Bradstreet v. Greenmoss Builders=1148
Note : Other False Statements of Fact=1148
United States v. Alvarez=1149
Hustler Magazine v. Falwell=1153
2. "Nonnewsworthy" Disclosures of "Private" Information=1155
Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn=1155
Note : Invasion of Privacy and the First Amendment=1158
3. Threats=1161
Bridges v. California=1161
Watts v. United States=1162
Planned Parenthood v. American Coalition of Life Activists=1163
4. Commercial Advertising=1165
Virginia State Board of Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council=1166
Note : Virginia Pharmacy and "the Free Flow of Commercial Information"=1172
Note : Truthful, Nondeceptive Commercial Advertising after Virginia Phannacy=1174
Central Hudson Gas v. Public Service Commission of New York=1175
Note : Truthful, Nondeceptive Commercial Advertising=1176
Note : Other Regulations of Commercial Advertising=1180
5. Obscenity=1183
Roth v. United States ; Alberts v. California=1184
Note : Obscenity and Free Expression=1185
Note : Developments in the Law of "Obscenity"―1957-1973=1189
Miller v. California=1192
Paris Adult Theatre I v. Slaton=1195
Note : The 1973 Reformulation and Its Aftermath=1198
6. Child Pornography, Animal Cruelty, and Violent Expression=1201
New York v. Ferber=1201
Ashcroft v. The Free Speech Coalition=1203
Note : Child Pornography=1206
United States v. Stevens=1208
Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association=1211
7. The Lewd, the Profane, and the Indecent=1214
Cohen v. California=1215
Note : Profanity, Cohen, and the Captive Audience=1218
Erznoznik v. Jacksonville=1221
FCC v. Pacifica Foundation=1222
Note : Fleeting Expletives=1224
Sable Communications, Inc. v. FCC=1225
Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union=1226
Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union=1227
Note : "Indecent" Expression=1229
Note : Zoning Theaters with Adult Movies and Bars with Nude Dancing=1232
8. Hate Speech and Pornography=1236
Beauharnais v. Illinois=1236
Note : Group Defamation and "Hate Speech"=1239
R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul=1243
Wisconsin v. Mitchell=1248
Note : R.A.V. and Mitchell=1248
Virginia v. Black=1251
Note : R.A.V. and Black=1258
Note : Pornography and the Victimization of Women=1259
Note : "Low" Value Speech―Final Thoughts=1262
E. Content-Neutral Restrictions : Limitations on the Means of Communication and the Problem of Content-Neutrality=1263
1. General Principles=1264
Schneider v. State=1264
Martin v. City of Struthers=1265
Kovacs v. Cooper=1266
Metromedia, Inc. v. San Diego=1266
City of Ladue v. Gilleo=1267
Bartnicki v. Vopper=1268
Note : The Search for Principles=1270
Note : The Meaning of "Content-Neutrality"=1271
2. Speech on Public Property : The Public Forum=1274
a. The Public Forum : Streets and Parks=1275
Commonwealth v. Davis=1275
Hague v. CIO=1276
Schneider v. State=1277
Note : Regulating the Public Forum=1278
Note : Devices for Regulating the Public Forum=1282
b. The Public Forum : Other Publicly Owned Property=1285
Adderley v. Florida=1285
Note : "No Less Than a Private Owner of Property"?=1287
International Society for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee=1291
Note : Modern Public Forum Doctrine=1293
Note : The Right to a "Private" Forum=1294
c. The Public Forum : Unequal Access and the Problem of Content-Neutrality=1296
Police Department of Chicago v. Mosley=1296
Note : Mosley and the "Equality" of Ideas=1298
Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights=1300
Note : Lehman and the Limits of Mosley=1304
Perry Educators' Association v. Perry Local Educators' Association=1305
Note : Quintessential, Designated, and Nonpublic Forums=1307
Note : Religious Expression and the Meaning of "Viewpoint Neutrality"=1311
Christian Legal Society Chapter v. Martinez=1314
d. Unequal Access and the Problem of Government Speech=1317
Southeastern Promotions v. Conrad=1317
Board of Education, Island Trees Union Free School District v. Pico=1319
Regan v. Taxation with Representation of Washington=1321
Rust v. Sullivan=1322
Note : The Implications of Rust=1324
National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley=1326
Legal Services Corp. v. Velazquez=1329
Note : The Reach of Government Speech=1332
3. Symbolic Conduct=1337
United States v. O'Brien=1338
Note : Draft Card Burning and the First Amendment=1342
Note : Flag Desecration and Misuse=1348
Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.=1353
City of Erie v. Pap's A.M.=1355
Note : Other Forms of Symbolic Speech=1357
4. Regulation of Political Solicitation, Contribution, Expenditure, and Activity=1359
Buckley v. Valeo=1359
Note : Buckley and the Problem of Abridging Speech to "Enhance" the Electoral Process=1367
Note : Subsidy and Disclosure=1370
Note : Contribution Limits, PACs, and Political Parties=1374
McConnell v. Federal Election Commission=1375
Davis v. Federal Election Commission=1378
Arizona Free Enterprise Club's Freedom Club PAC v. Bennett=1378
Note : Corporate Contributions and Expenditures=1381
Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission=1385
Note : Reflections on Citizens United=1397
Note : Additional Regulation of the Electoral Process=1400
Note : Regulation the Political Activities of Public Employees=1402
5. Other Means of Expression : Litigation, Association, and the Right Not to Speak=1405
NAACP v. Button=1405
Note : Litigation and the First Amendment=1406
NAACP v. Alabama=1408
Roberts v. U.S. Jaycees=1409
Note : Association and the First Amendment=1410
Boy Scouts of America v. Dale=1411
Note : The Meaning of Dale=1414
PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins=1415
Note : Compelled Affirmation, Expression, and Association : The Right Not to Speak=1415
Note : Content-Neutral Restrictions―Final Thoughts=1419
F. Freedom of the Press=1420
1. A "Preferred" Status for the Press?=1420
2. A Right to "Gather" News?=1421
Branzburg v. Hayes=1421
Note : A Right to Gather News?=1425
Note : A Press Right of Access to Information?=1427
Richmond Newspapers v. Virginia=1429
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court=1431
Note : Variations on the Press Right of Access=1432
3. Differential Treatment of the Press=1433
Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v. Minnesota Commissioner of Revenue=1433
Note : Differential Treatment=1436
4. Regulating the Press to "Improve" the Marketplace of Ideas=1437
Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo=1437
Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC=1438
Note : Regulating the Airwaves=1440
Turner Broadcasting System Inc. v. FCC=1444
Note : Turner and the Regulation of Cable=1447
Note : The First Amendment in Cyberspace=1447
Note : Free Expression―Final Thoughts=1451
VIII. The Constitution and Religion=1453
A. Introduction : Historical and Analytical Overview=1453
Everson v. Board of Education=1453
Note : The History of the Religion Clauses=1455
Note : General Approaches to the Religion Clauses=1462
Note : Defining Religion=1467
B. The Establishment Clause=1470
1. The Anticoercion Principle=1471
Lee. v. Weisman=1471
Note : The Anticoercion Principle=1479
2. The Nonendorsement Principle and De Facto Establishments=1482
Lynch v. Donnelly=1482
Note : The Nonendorsement Principle=1488
3. Impermissible Purposes : The School Prayer Cases=1496
Note : Problems with a "Purpose" Test=1496
4. Facially Neutral Statutes That Incidentally Aid Religion : Permissible and Impermissible Effects=1502
Note : The Problem and Its Background=1502
Mueller v. Allen=1504
Note : From Aguilar to Mitchell=1508
Zelman v. Simmons-Harris=1513
Note : Purpose and Effect in Aid to Nonpublic Education―Benevolent Neutrality?=1515
Note : Concluding Observations=1520
C. The Free Exercise Clause : Required Accommodations=1521
Note : From Reynolds to Smith=1521
Braunfeld v. Brown=1522
Sherbert v. Verner=1522
Wisconsin v. Yoder=1523
Note : Problems of Mandatory Accommodation=1525
Employment Division, Department of Human Resources v. Smith=1528
Note : Should Accommodation Be Required?=1536
D. Permissible Accommodation=1538
Corporation of Presiding Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints v. Amos=1539
Texas Monthly v. Bullock=1543
Board of Education of Kiryas Joel Village School District v. Grumet=1544
Note : When - If Ever - Should Accommodations of Religion Be Permitted?=1546
E. Free Exercise, Free Speech, and the Right of Expressive Association=1549
Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & School v. EEOC=1549
Note : The Relation between the Religion Clauses and Other Protections of Expression=1550
Note : Concluding Observations=1554
IX. State Action, Baselines, and the Problem of Private Power=1555
A. State Action, Federalism, and Individual Autonomy=1556
1. State Action and Federalism=1556
The Civil Rights Cases=1556
Note : Federalism and the Substantive Content of the State Action Doctrine=1559
2. State Action and Individual Autonomy=1560
B. Pure Inaction and the Theory of Governmental Neutrality=1562
1. Pure Inaction=1562
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services=1562
Flagg Brothers v. Brooks=1564
Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co.=1568
Note : The Problem of the Passive State=1569
2. Judicial Action and the Theory of Government Neutrality=1573
Shelley v. Kraemer=1573
Note : Shelley v. Kraemer, State Inaction, and the Theory of Government Neutrality=1576
C. Constitutionally Impermissible Departures from Neutrality : State Subsidization, Approval, and Encouragement=1582
1. State Subsidization of Private Conduct=1582
Burton v. Wilmington Parking Authority=1582
Note : Subsidies, Penalties, and the Search for a Baseline=1584
Rendell-Baker v. Kohn=1587
San Francisco Arts & Athletics, Inc. v. United States Olympic Committee=1588
Note : State Action as Coercion or Significant Encouragement=1589
2. State Licensing and Authorization=1592
Public Utilities Commission v. Pollak=1592
Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis=1592
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.=1594
Note : Licensing, Authorization, and Entwinement as State Action=1596
D. Constitutionally Required Departures from Neutrality : The Public Function Doctrine=1597
Marsh v. Alabama=1597
Note : The "Public Function" Theory and the Passive State=1599
Jackson v. Metropolitan Edison Co.=1604
Note : Public Functions as "Exclusive Prerogatives" of the State=1605
E. Unconstitutional Conditions and the Benefit/Burden Distinction=1608
Rust v. Sullivan=1609
Maher v. Roe=1610
National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius=1611
Nollan v. California Coastal Commission=1613
Note : Benefits, Burdens, and Coercion=1614
F. Some Final Thoughts=1620
Table of Cases=1621
Table of Authorities=1641
Index=1665
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The Seventh Edition presents new material on originalism and the right to bear arms; incorporation and the Second Amendment; and Libya and the War Powers Resolution. Full, analytic treatment of the Supreme Court's decisions in the Affordable Care Act is presented. Coverage of the preemption doctrine is expanded. A new discussion of the Religion Clauses' treatment considers church autonomy in light of Hosanna-Tabor. The text on freedom of expression has been revised to incorporate new cases such as Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (on campaign finance regulation), Snyder v. Phelps (on intentional infliction of emotional distress), Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Ass'n (on violent video games), FCC v. Fox Television Stations (on expletives in broadcasting), and United States v. Alvarez (on criminal liability for lying about receiving medals of honor.) New material on privacy and the Internet brings the Seventh Edition completely up to date.
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