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Can We Reason About Reason? On Adrian Vermeule’s Law and the Limits of Reason
This review proceeds in five parts. Part I presents Vermeule's thesis in a nutshell, trying to do justice to its subtle complexities and...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Dec 11, 2010


Book Review: Allison's The English Historical Constitution: Continuity, Change and European Effects
In my review of John W.F. Allison’s The English Historical Constitution: Continuity, Change and European Effects , I examine his...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Jan 1, 2010


Is it the Right Revolution? On Tushnet’s The Rights Revolution in the Twentieth Century
This is yet another manuscript by one of the most interesting and prolific American constitutional law professors that the Critical Legal...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Dec 1, 2008


Dicey
Albert Venn Dicey served as the Vinerian Chair Professor of English Law at Oxford for twenty‐seven years and reached a level of legal...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Jan 1, 2008


Evolution Vs. Revolution: Dueling Models of Dualism
When the world is once again preoccupied with constitution-making, this article challenges us to rethink our most basic conceptions...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Feb 21, 2007


Declassifying the Classified
Despite the prevalence of staggered boards, only lately have they become the focus of corporate debate, and the literature on them is...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Sep 5, 2004


We the British People
This article argues that between 1832 and 1911 the British constitution had operated under popular rather than parliamentary sovereignty....

Prof. Rivka Weill
Jan 1, 2004


Dicey Was Not Diceyan
There is an apparent paradox between Dicey’s treatment of parliamentary sovereignty as the central premise of the British constitution...

Prof. Rivka Weill
Jan 1, 2003
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