[EL] State courts and policy making
Schultz, David
dschultz at hamline.edu
Tue Nov 12 11:43:12 PST 2019
Hi all:
A shameless self-promotion for those interested in state courts. My “State
Courts and Democratic Theory: Toward a Theory of State Constitution and
Judicial Review,"45 Mitchell Hamline L. Rev., 578 (2019) is out.
The article seeks to construct a theory of state court policy making
recognizing that: 1) state judge are often elected and not appointed; 2)
state courts get their authority from their state constitutions and not the
US Constitution; and 3) state courts are often forced to navigate both
majoritarian and counter-majoritarian concerns.
Given the increasingly prominent role state courts have in election law
and in other political issues, some of you may find this of interest.
The article should be available soon on Westlaw and at the Mitchell Hamline
website.
Thank you.
--
David Schultz, Professor
Hamline University
Department of Political Science
1536 Hewitt Ave
MS B 1805
St. Paul, Minnesota 55104
651.523.2858 (voice)
651.523.3170 (fax)
http://davidschultz.efoliomn.com/
http://works.bepress.com/david_schultz/
http://schultzstake.blogspot.com/
Twitter: @ProfDSchultz
My latest book: Presidential Swing States: Why Only Ten Matter
https://rowman.com/ISBN/9780739195246/Presidential-Swing-States-Why-Only-Ten-Matter
FacultyRow SuperProfessor, 2012, 2013, 2014
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