Horwitz on the Private Sector Response to Hurricane Katrina and the Bourgeois Virtues (from Accepting the Invisible Hand)
Online symposium on behavioral law and economics at Truth on the Market

New issue of Social Philosophy and Policy on constitutionalism

Mark D. White

The January 2011 issue of Social Philosophy and Policy is now online, with the theme being constitutionalism, and including papers by Larry Alexander, Richard Epstein, Loren Lomasky, Sanford Levinson, Guido Pincione, Ilya Somin and more. (If you like the papers in this journal, I also recommend Alexander's edited volume Constitutionalism: Philosophical Foundations from Cambridge.)

(The table of contents appears below the fold.)

SOCIAL PHILOSOPHY AND POLICY

Volume 28 - Issue 01 - January 2011

PDF version of this Table of Contents
Research Articles

 

WHAT ARE CONSTITUTIONS, AND WHAT SHOULD (AND CAN) THEY DO?

Larry Alexander

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 1 - 24

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000038

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

CONSTITUTION AND FUNDAMENTAL LAW: THE LESSON OF CLASSICAL ATHENS

John David Lewis

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 25 - 49

doi:10.1017/S026505251000004X

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

CONTRACT, COVENANT, CONSTITUTION

Loren E. Lomasky

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 50 - 71

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000051

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

CONSTITUTIONALISM IN THE AGE OF TERROR

Michael Zuckert, Felix Valenzuela

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 72 - 114

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000063

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

THE LIBERAL CONSTITUTION AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS

Fernando R. Tesón

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 115 - 149

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000075

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

DO CONSTITUTIONS HAVE A POINT? REFLECTIONS ON “PARCHMENT BARRIERS” AND PREAMBLES

Sanford Levinson

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 150 - 178

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000087

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

THE ORIGINS OF AN INDEPENDENT JUDICIARY IN NEW YORK, 1621–1777

Scott D. Gerber

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 179 - 201

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000099

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

FOOT VOTING, POLITICAL IGNORANCE, AND CONSTITUTIONAL DESIGN

Ilya Somin

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 202 - 227

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000105

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

PLURALIST CONSTITUTIONALISM

William A. Galston

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 228 - 241

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000117

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY AND CONSTITUTIONS

James S. Fishkin

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 242 - 260

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000129

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

THE CONSTITUTION OF NONDOMINATION

Guido Pincione

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 261 - 289

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000130

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

CAN WE DESIGN AN OPTIMAL CONSTITUTION? OF STRUCTURAL AMBIGUITY AND RIGHTS CLARITY

Richard A. Epstein

Social Philosophy and Policy, Volume 28, Issue 01, January 2011, pp 290 - 324

doi:10.1017/S0265052510000142

Published online by Cambridge University Press 30 Nov 2010

[ abstract ]

 

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