Search results for: "legitimacy" (1038 results)
of politics and, like any political event,” depends on the past’s “fortuities.” 126 Hor- witz rescued Brown’s legitimacy—but only by tying the case
a coequal branch to revitalize these powers—that doing so would enhance Congress’s legitimacy with the public, and that it is consistent with the
Litigation, 100 COLUM. L. REV. 370, 417-28 (2000); Samuel Issacharoff, Governance and Legitimacy in the Law of Class Actions, 1999 SUP. CT. REV. 337, 367
at their own expense, the Court recognized the legitimacy and primacy of the state’s interest in education. Though a state may not be able to compel
100 COLUM. L. REV. 370, 417-28 (2000); Samuel Issacharoff, Governance and Legitimacy in the Law of Class Actions, 1999 SUP. CT. REV. 337, 367-70
hallmarks of modern administrative agencies: discretion authorized by statute and additional legitimacy arising from direct public input. New Haven’s Town
630, 641 (1981)). 54. Caleb Nelson, The Legitimacy of (Some) Federal Common Law, 101 VA. L. REV. 1, 35-36 (2015). 55. Statutory interpretation is
constitutional legitimacy, as opposed to the uncertain legal status that would inevitably accompany a series of ad hoc executive efforts to disengage from
legitimacy of the law and hence reduce compliance even with respect to core, traditional offenses for which a consensus as to their wrongfulness has
targeting entire subjects.202 Antidemocratic policymakers target books that question the legitimacy of their power or expose the harm that their policies