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dc.contributor.authorDriver, Justin
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-18T00:33:27Z
dc.date.available2022-02-18T00:33:27Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.citationThe Constitutional Conservatism of the Warren Court, 100 California Law Review 1101 (2012)en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13051/17981
dc.description.abstractScholarly debate about the Warren Court casts a long shadow over modern constitutional law. The essential contours of this debate have now grown exceedingly familiar: where liberal law professors overwhelmingly heap praise upon the Warren Court, conservatives generally heap contempt. Although some liberals have begun contending that the Warren Court overstepped the bounds of judicial propriety, such concessions do not reconfigure the debate's fundamental terms. Conspicuously absent from scholarly discourse to date, however, is a sustained liberal argument contending that the Warren Court made substantial mistakes-not by going excessively far, but by going insufficiently far in its constitutional interpretations. This Article supplies that missing perspective by providing a historically contextualized critique of the Warren Court's jurisprudence, identifying significant opinions in which the Court issued conservative constitutional rulings even though plausible routes led to liberal outcomes. Examining the Warren Court's overlooked tradition of constitutional conservatism not only demythologizes that institution and brings sharper focus to the constitutional past; it may also help to inspire a progressive reenvisioning of the constitutional future.en_US
dc.publisherCalifornia Law Reviewen_US
dc.subjectLawen_US
dc.titleThe Constitutional Conservatism of the Warren Courten_US
rioxxterms.versionNAen_US
rioxxterms.typeJournal Article/Reviewen_US
refterms.dateFOA2022-02-18T00:33:27Z


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