The U.S. Constitution
Archival records, profiles, and educational resources since 1995.

En Banc Review in Federal Appeals Courts
Most federal appellate cases in the U.S. courts of appeals are decided by three judges. That is not a fun fact. It is the structural reality that makes “en banc” review so powerful. When a federal court of appeals sits en banc , it is the circuit speaking with a bigger voice, sometimes with...
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Treaties vs. Executive Agreements
Americans hear the word treaty and assume a single, official process: the President negotiates, the Senate votes, the United States is bound. That is real, and it is in the Constitution. But it is not the whole story. In modern practice, many of the most important U.S. commitments with other...
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Selective Incorporation
The Bill of Rights reads like a national promise. Speech. Religion. Jury trials. Counsel. Protection against unreasonable searches. For many Americans, it feels obvious that these rules bind every government actor, from the FBI to your local police department. But that instinct is historically...
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Youngstown and Jackson’s Three Tiers of Presidential Power
Presidential power is easiest to defend when it looks like competence. A crisis hits, an industry freezes, a strike threatens supply chains, and the President acts. The harder question is not whether the action was useful . The question is whether it was lawful . That tension is why Youngstown...
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Stare Decisis and Precedent
Americans talk about Supreme Court decisions like they are permanent, like a ruling is a constitutional tattoo. But much of what people experience as constitutional law is not spelled out line by line in the Constitution’s text. It is mediated through precedent and doctrine, meaning earlier cases...
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Ripeness and Mootness
Federal courts are not constitutional complaint boxes where you drop off a problem and get back a legal answer. They are built for a narrower job: resolving live disputes between real parties with something concrete at stake. That is why timing kills cases in two different directions. Ripeness...
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The Dormant Commerce Clause Explained
Most people learn the Commerce Clause as a simple grant of power: Congress may regulate commerce “among the several States.” Then they run into a stranger idea that is not written anywhere in the Constitution’s text: even when Congress does nothing , states still cannot pass laws that...
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The Political Question Doctrine
Sometimes the biggest headline in a Supreme Court story is not what the justices decided. It is what they refused to decide. When a court labels an issue a political question , it is not saying the issue is “too political” in the everyday sense. Almost everything in constitutional law has...
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Federal Preemption
Most constitutional fights between states and the federal government do not look like philosophical debates about federalism. They look like a lawsuit over a warning label, a city ordinance, or a state enforcement policy that collides with a federal program. That collision has a name: federal...
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The Non-Delegation Doctrine
Congress is supposed to legislate. Agencies are supposed to administer. That is the civics-class version of separation of powers. Then you open the Federal Register and realize the modern government runs on something else: Congress writes broad statutes, agencies write the detailed rules that...
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The Major Questions Doctrine
You have probably seen the phrase major questions doctrine in headlines that sound like this: “Supreme Court blocks agency rule” or “Court says Congress must decide.” It can feel like a technical argument about statutory wording. But underneath it is a much bigger constitutional anxiety:...
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Chevron Deference and the End of the Two-Step
You can read the same statute two ways and still be acting in good faith. For decades, American administrative law had an official tie-breaker for that situation, and it usually favored the executive branch. It was called Chevron deference , and it came from a 1984 Supreme Court case, Chevron...
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Writ of Mandamus Explained
In civics class, we learn that courts interpret the law. In real life, courts sometimes do something more forceful: they order the government to act . That tool is called a writ of mandamus . It is not a routine motion and not a shortcut for people who are frustrated with bureaucracy. It is an...
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Criminal Statutes of Limitations
You can think of a criminal statute of limitations as the law’s answer to a hard question: how long is too long to wait before the government files charges? Most people assume the answer is simple. A crime happens, the clock starts, the state either charges in time or loses its chance. That is...
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Immigration Removal Proceedings, Explained
“Deportation” is the word most Americans use. The legal system mostly uses a different one: removal . That shift in vocabulary matters because it points to something bigger. Removal is not a single event. It is a process , built from notice requirements, hearings, burdens of proof, and appeals...
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How the Federal Court System Works
People talk about “going to federal court” like it is one place with one set of rules. It is not. It is a ladder, and where you start on that ladder determines almost everything: what evidence matters, which judges you face, what you can appeal, and how hard it will be to get the Supreme Court...
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Burden of Proof: Criminal vs. Civil
You can watch two trials about the same event, hear many of the same facts, and see two different outcomes. Not because one judge “went easy” or one jury was smarter. But because the law asked different questions. The difference is the burden of proof , meaning how sure the factfinder must be...
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Attorney-Client Privilege Explained
Attorney-client privilege is one of the most powerful ideas in American law, and one of the most misunderstood. People hear “privileged” and assume it means anything you tell a lawyer becomes legally untouchable. It does not. The real rule is narrower and more interesting: the law protects...
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Defamation Law Explained
Defamation law sits in one of the Constitution’s most misunderstood pressure points: the place where the First Amendment’s promise of free expression meets a person’s ability to protect their name. Many people assume the First Amendment means you can say anything without consequence. Others...
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Article IV Privileges and Immunities Clause
Most constitutional fights look like a vertical power struggle: you versus the government. Article IV’s Privileges and Immunities Clause is different. It is a horizontal fight, one state versus another, with individual Americans caught in the middle. The basic idea is simple: if you are an...
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