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By krisnelson on Oct 16, 2011 in government / law
Antonin Scalia, current Supreme Court justice and originalist extraordinaire, wrote “Common-Law Courts in a Civil Law System” as a part of A Matter of Interpretation: Federal Courts and the Law. In it explains his approach to legal reasoning and especially to Constitutional interpretation, and especially rejects both legislative history and the so-called “living Constitution” of liberal justices like Stephen Breyer.
Posted in government, law | Tagged Antonin Scalia, constitution, courts, law, liberty, originalism, supreme court |
By krisnelson on Oct 11, 2011 in culture / government / history / technology
In Spreading the News, Richard R. John writes about the development of the American postal system in the eighteenth century, and the police choices that leverages the system as a means of newspaper distribution.
Posted in culture, government, history, technology | Tagged government, history, Mail, Newspaper, Richard R. John, United States |
By krisnelson on Oct 8, 2011 in government / history / law
In The Common Law in Colonial America: The Chesapeake and New England, 1607 – 1660, William Edward Nelson writes about three main colonial legal traditions: Virginia, New England, and Maryland. These three centers drew to various degrees from English common law, but deviated from it in a number of important respects and for reasons related to their establishments and purposes.
Posted in government, history, law | Tagged common law, England, government, history, law, Maryland, New England, Puritan, Roman Catholic, Virginia |
By krisnelson on Sep 22, 2011 in culture / government / history / law / science studies
In The Magic Mirror: Law in American History, Kermit Hall quotes former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. to explain why we should do legal history: “This abstraction called the Law is a magic mirror, [wherein] we see reflected, not only our own lives, but the lives of all men that have been!”
Posted in culture, government, history, law, science studies | Tagged government, history, law, Legal history, Oliver Wendell Holmes |
By krisnelson on Sep 18, 2011 in government / history / law
The question of whether John Marshall, Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court from 1803 – 1835, was an originalist is, of course, anachronistic, as the term had not yet been invented during his lifetime. Still, given the ongoing controversy regarding judicial interpretation today, it’s an interesting question to ask about one of the foundational justices in American jurisprudence.
Posted in government, history, law | Tagged constitution, history, John Marshall, Judiciary, law, originalism, United States Constitution |
By krisnelson on Sep 15, 2011 in government / history / law / research / theory
I’m reading G. Edward White’s The American Judicial Tradition: Profiles of Leading American Judges as part of my general background reading on American legal history. Lawrence Friedman may argue that “[t]here really isn’t a canon for legal history,” but I think White’s book at least comes close.
Posted in government, history, law, research, theory | Tagged Antonin Scalia, government, history, John Marshall, Judiciary, law, research, theory, United States, William Rehnquist |
By krisnelson on Sep 14, 2011 in education / government / law / open access / research / technology
I had always hoped that PACER – which I hear runs a surplus anyway – would trend downward in price as the cost of delivering electronic access decreases. Instead comes the news that the price will rise by 25%, from 8 to 10 cents per page.
Posted in education, government, law, open access, research, technology | Tagged federal courts, law, PACER, research, technology |
By krisnelson on May 30, 2011 in business / education / government / intellectual property / law / patents / science / technology
According to Dr. Domonic Montisano of the UCSD’s technology transfer office, their goal is to get university research out to the public through the avenue of commercialization.
Posted in business, education, government, intellectual property, law, patents, science, technology | Tagged Bayh–Dole Act, business, law, License, open source, patents, research, science, technology, Technology transfer |