The Constitution is the cornerstone of American government,
hailed as one of the greatest contributions of the Western
Enlightenment. While many seem content simply to celebrate it,
those most familiar with the document invariably find it wanting in
at least some aspects.
This unique volume brings together many of the country's most
esteemed constitutional commentators and invites them to answer two
questions: First, what is the stupidest provision of the
Constitution? "Stupid" need not mean evil. Thus, a second, related
question is whether the scholar-interpreter would be forced to
reach truly evil results even if applying his or her own favored
theory of constitutional interpretation.
The contributors include Lawrence Alexander, Akhil Reed Amar,
Jack Balkin, Philip Bobbitt, Gerard Bradley, Rebecca Brown, Steven
Calabresi, Lief Carter, Christopher Eisgruber, Lawrence Sager,
Marie Failinger, Daniel Farber, James Fleming, Mark Graber, Stephen
Griffin, Gary Jacobsohn, Randall Kennedy, Lewis LaRue, Theodore
Lowi, Earl Maltz, Michael McConnell, Matthew Michael, Robert Nagel,
Daniel Ortiz, Pamela Karlen, Michael Paulsen, Robert Post, Lucas
Powe, Dorothy Roberts, Jeffrey Rosen, Frederick Schauer, Michael
Seidman, Suzanna Sherry, David Strauss, Laurence Tribe, Mark
Tushnet, and John Yoo.
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