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The most eyebrow-raising essay thus far comes from Adrian Vermeule, a chaired professor ... to see the word rights set off in scare quotes, to say the least. Later descriptions take on a more ...
Professor Adrian Vermeule, a 2016 Catholic convert, is an “integralist” who regrets his academic specialty, the Constitution, and rejects the separation of church and state. His much-discussed ...
Adrian Vermeule would like to transform the United States into an authoritarian, Catholic theocracy. In an essay for The Atlantic, the esteemed Harvard Law School professor implores his fellow ...
The University of Chicago Law Review has just published Brian Leiter's critique of Professor Adrian Vermeule's Common Good Constitutionalism. As you might expect, Leiter is not a fan.
Adrian Vermeule and Eric Posner have a pair of blog posts sketching out a new paper idea. Their idea is to explore the question: “Under what conditions should judges take into account the ...
Adrian Vermeule notes that originalism has become the dominant method of constitutional interpretation on the right. “When, in recent years, legal conservatism has won the upper hand in the ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with law professor Adrian Vermeule about the importance and future of administrative law cases at the Supreme Court, as it loses Stephen Breyer, an expert in the field.
At quick glance, a few names are missing: co-blogger Steve Sachs, Jack Goldsmith, and Adrian Vermeule, among others. Quite fittingly, Vermeule has written a response. Vermeule identifies a problem ...
Adrian Vermeule is the Ralph S. Tyler, Jr., Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School. In Kisor v. Wilkie, the Supreme Court has agreed to consider whether the doctrine of deference to ...
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