Law Reviews and Other Scholarly Articles
When Interbranch Norms Break Down: Of Arms-for-Hostages, "Orderly Shutdowns," Presidential Impeachments, and Judicial Coups, __Cornell J. L. & Pub. Pol. __(2003).
Disappearing Democracy: How Bush v. Gore Undermined
the Federal Right to Vote for Presidential Electors, 29 Fla. St. U. L.
Rev. 535-585 (2001).
Returning Separation of Powers Analysis to
its Normative Roots: The Constitutionality of Qui Tam Actions and Other
Private Suits to Enforce Civil Penalties, 30 Environmental L. Reporter
11,081-11,103 (2000).
Federalism's 'Old Deal': What's Right and
Wrong With Conservative Judicial Activism, 45 Vill. L. Rev. 201-243 (2000).
Reflections in Three Mirrors: Complexities
of Representation in a Constitutional Democracy, 60 Ohio St. L. J. 693-709
(1999).
Interbranch Accountability in State Government
and the Constitutional Requirement of Judicial Independence, 61 Law &
Contemp. Probs. 21-54 (1998) [abstracted in International Political Science
Abstracts].
Learning McNamara's Lessons: How the War Powers
Resolution Advances the Rule of Law, 47 Case W. Res. L. Rev. 1281-1304
(1997).
Back to the Future of the American State:
Overruling Buckley v. Valeo and Other Madisonian Steps, 57 U. Pitt. L.
Rev. 443-459 (1996), excerpted in F.G. Slabach, The Constitution and Campaign
Finance Reform: An Anthology (1998).
The Limits of Legal Realism as Biography (book
review of Kim Isaac Eisler, A Justice for All: William J. Brennan, Jr.,
and the Decisions that Transformed America), 21 Law & Social Inquiry 205-214
(1996).
Book Review (with M. Chamallas) of Gregory
Howard Williams, Life on the Color Line: The True Story of a White Boy
Who Discovered He Was Black, 46 J. Legal Educ. 121-129 (1996), excerpted
in R. Delgado and J. Stefancic, eds., Critical White Studies: Looking
Behind the Mirror (1997).
Political Accountability in a System of Checks
and Balances: The Case of Presidential Review of Rulemaking, 48 Ark. L.
Rev. 161-214 (1995).
Presidents, Pardons, and Prosecutors: Legal
Accountability and the Separation of Powers, 11 Yale Law & Pol. Rev. 361-406
(1993).
Voting Rights and the "Statutory Constitution,"
56 Law and Contemp. Probs. 243-271 (1993).
Who May Remove or Discipline Federal Judges?
A Constitutional Analysis, 142 U. Penn. L. Rev. 209-242 (1993).
Negotiating for Knowledge: Administrative
Responses to Congressional Demands for Information, 44 Admin. L. Rev.
197-243 (1992).
The Rust That Corrodes: State Action, Free
Speech, and the Pursuit of Responsibility, 52 La. L. Rev. 1585-1606 (1992).
Structure, Relationship, Ideology, or, How
Would We a Know a "New Public Law" If We Saw It?, 89 Mich. L. Rev. 837-74
(1991).
Why Are So Many People So Unhappy? Habits
of Thought and Resistance to Diversity in Legal Education, 75 Iowa L.
Rev. 1033-56 (1990).
Independent Policymaking and Presidential
Power: A Constitutional Analysis, 57 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 596-626 (1989),
excerpted in T.O. Sargentich, Administrative Law Anthology (1994).
Rights, Remedies and Restraint, 64 Chi.-Kent
L. Rev. 531-572 (1989).
Separation of Powers and the Rule of Law:
The Virtues of "Seeing the Trees," 30 Wm. & Mary L. Rev. 375-86 (1989).
Compulsory Education and the Tension Between
Liberty and Equality: A Comment on Professor Dworkin, 72 Iowa L. Rev.
97-107 (1987).
Conventionalism in Constitutional Interpretation
and the Place of Administrative Agencies, 36 Am. U. L. Rev. 573-99 (1987).
Equal Protection, Free Speech, and the Selective
Prosecution of Draft Nonregistrants, 72 Iowa L. Rev. 359-89 (1987).
Federal Policy Making By Consent Decree: An
Analysis of Agency and Judicial Discretion, 1987 U. Chi. Legal F. 241-93.
Legal Disagreement and Negotiation in a Government
of Laws: The Case of Executive Privilege Claims Against Congress, 71 Minn.
L. Rev. 461-542 (1987), excerpted in T.O. Sargentich, Administrative Law
Anthology (1994).
Prophets and Provocateurs, 37 J. Legal Educ.
529-32 (1987). School Desegregation Remedies and the Fair Governance of
Schools, 132 U. Pa. L. Rev. 1041- 1129 (1984).
Presidential Regulatory Oversight and the
Separation of Powers: The Constitutionality of Executive Order No. 12,291,
23 Ariz. L. Rev. 1235-65 (1981).