美国宪法学大会
美国宪法学会第二届大会将于2019年3月9-10日在亚利桑那大学法学院伦奎斯特中心举办。

19年大会的主旨演说由芝加哥法学院的David Strauss发表,而评议人包括:Jessica Bulman-Pozen、Gillian Metzger、Bertrall Ross、John Harrison、Victoria Nourse、Stephen Sachs、Aziz Huq
此外,还有如下论文将发表:
Emily Berman,Individualization in the Age of Big Data
Kiel Brennan-Marquez,Combinatorial Stare Decisis
Laura Cisneros,The Supreme Court in the State of Exception: A Dialectical Model of Judicial Review
Laurence Claus,Deciding Distribution
Travis Crum,The Statutory Origins of the Fifteenth Amendment
Frederick Gedicks,Fixed Constitutional Meaning and Other Implausible Originalisms
Paul Gowder,Building We the People
Craig Green,United/States: A Revolutionary History of Statehood, the United States, and American Federalism
Stephen Griffin,Optimistic Originalism Meets the Unfortunate Nineteenth Century
Tara Grove,The Law of Interpreting Presidential Laws
Aziz Huq,Article II and Antidiscrimination Norms
Andrew Kent, “Faithful Execution” and Article II
Donald Kochan,The Framing Effects of Labeling Constitutional Products
Earl Maltz,The Ripples of Backlash: Same-Sex Marriage, The Election of 2004, and the Contingent Nature of the Evolution of Constitutional Law
Lisa Manheim,Reviewing Presidential Orders
Helen Norton,The Government’s Speech and the Constitution
Kirsten Nussbaumer,National Security and Election Law Autonomy
Zachary Price,Symmetric Constitutionalism: An Essay on Masterpiece Cakeshop and the Post-Kennedy Supreme Court
Christopher Schmidt,Popular Constitutionalism: A User Guide
David Schraub,Doctrinal Sunsets
Miriam Seifter,Judging Power Plays in the American States
Carolyn Shapiro,Democracy, Federalism, and the Guarantee Clause
David Sloss,Universal Human Rights and Constitutional Change
Calvin TerBeek,The Constitution as Political Program: The Republican Party and Originalism, 1977–88
Ilan Wurman,The Specification Power
首届大会在2018年3月16-17日召开。
发表主旨演讲的是哈佛法学院的 Adrian Vermeule 教授,他在2016年出版一部颇具影响的专著 Law's Abnegation: From Law's Empire to the Administrative State。
主题发言还包括:
Tabatha Abu El-Haj,Networking the Party: First Amendment Rights & the Pursuit of Responsive Party Government
Aaron Tang,Rethinking Political Power in Judicial Review
Franita Tolson,The Lure of Federalism in Election Law Doctrine
Kiel Brennan-Marquez,Overzealous Enforcement and Remedial Proportionality
David Fontana,Paper Title TBA
Deborah Pearlstein,Constitutional Law Limits on the Use of Military Force:How Much Does Compliance Tell Us About the Effectiveness of Legal Constraint?
Ian Bartrum,An Intellectual History of Article III
Jeffrey Schmitt,A Historical Reassessment of Congress’s “Power to Dispose Of” the Public Lands
John Stinneford,Original Meaning and the End of Long-Term Extreme Solitary Confinement
William Araiza,Animus and Its Discontents
Luke Boso,Dignity, Inequality and Stereotypes
Evan Zoldan,State Constitutional Restrictions on Special Legislation
Aziz Huq & Genevieve Lakier,The Triumph of Fault in Public Law
Victoria Nourse,Reclaiming the Constitutional Text from Originalism: The Case of Executive Power
Shalev Roisman,Presidential Fact Finding
Rebecca Aviel,Revanchist Rights Talk
Yvonne Lindgren,Scapegoating Abortion Rights: The Conservative Revolution and the Economic Decline of the Working Class
Yxta Murray,The Takings Clause of Boyle Heights
Stephen Griffin,The Historic Logic of Constitutional Change
Zachary Price,Reliance on the Office of Legal Counsel, or Self-Dealing Constitutional Interpretation in the Executive Branch
Mila Sohoni,Lochner's Latest Legacy: The Trump Administration and the Law of the Lochner Era
Richard Primus,Last Refuge: Enumerated Powers and the Bank of the United States
Christopher Schmidt,Section 5’s Forgotten Years: Congressional Power to Enforce the Fourteenth Amendment Before Katzenbach v Morgan
David Schwartz,Exorcising McCulloch’s Ghost
Chad Flanders,What Makes the Death Penalty Arbitrary?
Kyle Langvardt,After the Marketplace of Ideas
Ilan Wurman,Constitutional Primary and Secondary Rules
The William H. Rehnquist Center on the Constitutional Structures of Government was established in 2006 at the University of Arizona James E. Rogers College of Law. The non-partisan center honors the legacy of Chief Justice Rehnquist by encouraging public understanding of the structural constitutional themes that were integral to his jurisprudence: the separation of powers among the three branches of government, the balance of powers between the federal and state governments, and among sovereigns more generally, and judicial independence.