Series: Judicial Issues Forum | No. 29 of 29 « Previous

Jul 18

Past Event

Progressive Visions of Jurisprudence: A Debate

Event Materials

Video

Highlights

  • Consistent Narrative

    Ben Wittes: Over the last thirty to forty years, one side of the debate has developed a consistent narrative while progressives have not.

    Benjamin Wittes

  • New Textualism

    Douglas Kendall, Constitutional Accountability Center: New Textualism is a growing consensus around what’s right about textualism and originalism; it looks carefully at history but we don’t let history trump text.

  • Three Priorities for Progressives

    Geoffrey Stone, University of Chicago Law School: There are three things progressives must do.

Audio

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Summary

Over the past three decades, conservatives have articulated a coherent set of expectations of the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary that has proven compelling to the public and marketable in the political arena. By contrast, progressives have floundered both in developing any sort of consensus as to what they want from the courts and in describing their expectations to the public at large. Progressives have a number of competing visions of what a liberal jurisprudence might look like and how a liberal court would behave—visions that differ almost as sharply with one another as they do with conservative views on the Constitution and the courts. The current issue of the journal Democracy features a debate between two of these competing visions of liberal jurisprudence, pitting an essay urging a “Framers’ Constitution” – the idea that the principles set forth in the Constitution do not change, but that interpretation must evolve over time – against one arguing for “New Textualism” – a theory that asserts that progressive values are inherent in the Constitution’s text, history and structure, and that liberals should base their constitutional arguments, first and foremost, on text.

On July 18, the Brookings Institution hosted a Judicial Issues Forum debate with two of the authors of these papers, Douglas Kendall of the Constitutional Accountability Center and Geoffrey Stone of the University of Chicago Law School. Brookings Senior Fellows E.J. Dionne and Benjamin Wittes moderated the discussion.

After the program, panelists took audience questions.

Details

July 18, 2011

2:00 PM - 3:30 PM EDT

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • Introduction and Moderators

  • Panelists

    • Douglas Kendall

      Founder and President

      The Constitutional Accountability Center

    • Geoffrey Stone

      Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor

      The University of Chicago Law School

SERIES: Judicial Issues Forum | No. 29