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- HEIN V. FREEDOM from RELIGION FOUNDATION, INC
- Standing Doctrine, Judicial Technique, and the Gradual Shift from Rights-Based Constitutionalism to Executive-Centered Constitutionalism
- No. 18-2488 in the UNITED STATES COURT of APPEALS for the FOURTH CIRCUIT Plaintiffs-Appellees, V. DONALD J. TRUMP, President Of
- The Foreign Emoluments Clause
- DAVID C. RODEARMEL, Appellant, V. HILLARY
- The Collective Congress in the Structural Constitution, 70 Fla
- Application of the Ineligibility Clause
- The Constitutional Separation of Powers Between the President and Congress
- Revista De Investigações Constitucionais
- Why Our Next President May Keep His Or Her Senate Seat: a Conjecture on the Constitution's Incompatibility Clause
- The Ineligibility Clause: an Historical Approach to Its Interpretation and Application, 14 J
- How Rethinking Justiciability Might Bring Peace to the Establishment Clause John M
- The Original Public Meaning of the Foreign Emoluments Clause: a Reply to Professor Zephyr Teachout
- 1The District Court Concluded That the Plaintiffs Had Standing to Raise Their Claims, but Held That the Transition Rules Were Constitutional
- Statutory Rollback of Salary to Permit Appointment of Member of Congress to Executive Office
- Vacant Offices: Delays in Staffing Top Agency Positions
- Articles Administrative Collusion: How Delegation Diminishes the Collective Congress
- In the Supreme Court of the United States
- United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida Ocala Division
- Congress, Separation of Powers, and Standing
- The Foreign Emoluments Clause Introduction
- Congress, the Court, and the Constitution
- Supreme Court of the United States
- Law Day 2018 Conversation Starters
- The Foreign Emoluments Clause and the Chief Executive
- Separation of Powers: Interpretation Outside the Courts
- Nomination of Sitting Member of Congress to Be Ambassador to Vietnam
- The Foreign Emoluments Clause: Tracing the Framers’ Fears About Foreign Influence Over the President
- In the United States District Court for the District of Columbia
- The Emoluments Clauses of the U.S. Constitution
- The Emoluments Clause Have Been Raised