Posts Tagged ‘Supreme Court’

16
Mar

Reconstruction Originalism? How Original.

   Posted by: ZandyMan    in Legal

The Schmooze: Here is a great article from the Wall Street Journal discussing liberal lefties and conservative righties uniting around a form of constitutional interpretation based on the original intent of those who wrote the post Civil War Reconstruction amendments; as opposed to the intent of the Founding Fathers.

Rethinking Original Intent
The debate over the Constitution’s meaning takes a surprising turn; a pivotal gun-rights case

[The nation's founders in 'The Signing of the Constitution,' a 1940 painting by Howard Chandler Christy. A debate is building over how to interpret the document.] Art Resource, NY

The nation’s founders in ‘The Signing of the Constitution,’ a 1940 painting by Howard Chandler Christy. A debate is building over how to interpret the document.

After the Supreme Court struck down the District of Columbia’s handgun ban last June, gun-rights advocates trained their sights on similar restrictions in Chicago and Oak Park, Ill. Last month, the National Rifle Association received ammunition from an unlikely source: the Constitutional Accountability Center, a liberal litigation shop.

In a brief filed with the federal appeals court in Chicago, the center not only argued that gun ownership is a constitutional right, it also employed the legal method popularized by such conservative icons as Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. That method is originalism, which seeks to apply the law today according to the text’s meaning at the time of its adoption.

This new twist on originalism is gaining momentum, and its proponents hope it will lead courts to take a more expansive view of individual rights. Although nurtured by liberals — including some with close ties to the Obama administration — some conservatives are backing the broader application of the originalist method. In uniting some unusual allies, the Illinois gun-rights case could be the vehicle to correct what scholars on the left and right say is a 136-year-old constitutional wrong.

[Original Intent timeline] (l-r) Hulton Archive/Getty Images; LOC; Time Life Pictures/Getty Images; Getty Images

Progressive originalists are focusing on a clause in the 14th Amendment in their quest to change how the courts view individual rights. Click on the image for a look at the amendment’s history.

Related Reading

The Constitutional Accountability Center brief served in effect as an intellectual loss leader for liberals frustrated by conservative success in the battle over the Constitution’s meaning. Douglas Kendall, the center’s head, says he personally supports gun control, but if courts embrace his arguments, the door could open to a new era of liberal jurisprudence.

So-called progressive originalism departs from the conservative strain by shifting focus from the 18th-century constitutional text to the three Reconstruction amendments ratified after the Civil War. The 13th, 14th and 15th amendments radically altered the structure of American federalism, elevating federal power over that of the states, and giving individual rights pre-eminence.

Viewed through the Reconstruction prism, the “Constitution turns out to be way more liberal than conservative,” says Yale law professor Akhil Reed Amar, a leading proponent of progressive originalism. “The framers of the 14th Amendment were radical redistributionists. The 13th Amendment frees the slaves and there’s no compensation,” he says. “It’s the biggest redistribution of property in history.”

By applying methods blessed by conservatives to the neglected texts and forgotten framers of the Reconstruction amendments, liberals hope to deploy Read the rest of this entry »

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5
Feb

So What is a “Sport”?

   Posted by: ZandyMan    in Legal, Sports

Below is a great post from Howard Wasserman over at Sports Law Blog. The article discusses the recent decision from the Wisconsin Supreme Court holding that cheerleading is a ‘contact sport” (see my previous post on the decision here). Specifically, Wasserman contemplates what the court’s holding could mean for Title IX. Enjoy.

Title IX and the definition of sport

Having read the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s decision in Noffke v. Bakke and Marc’s ATL post on its Title IX implications, let me weigh in.

First, the court relied on a dictionary to define sport as an “activity involving physical exertion and skill that is governed by a set of rules or customs.” This is, to my mind, far too broad a definition–more on that in a minute. The court also found that the statutory requirement that there be “physical contact” in the activity applied to more than aggressive physical contact with the opponent. It included any physical contact, with opponent or teammate, incidental or not. That seems right to me, for reasons I mentioned in an earlier post on the case–a lot of things that must be considered sport and that surely were intended to be covered by this statute (which was enacted to limit liability for sports injuries resulting from simply negligence) almost never involve direct contact with an opponent (e.g., baseball, tennis, volleyball, track, swimming).

Second, the court rejected any requirement that something be competitive in order to be a sport. And that actually makes irrelevant what I consider the central element of a meaningful definition of sport–objective scoring (as opposed to “judging”) and objective determinations of winners. The court’s main justification for this was the inconsistency it would produce–something would or would not be a sport depending on what the team was doing and when–whether it was practice or a game or whether the cheerleaders were leading cheers at a basketball game on Friday or participating in a competition on Saturday. This argument strikes me as silly. It would be rational enough to recognize that a team (say, the boys’ basketball team) has as its central goal or purpose to engage in competition, but that practice (in which score may not be kept) is necessary to achieve that purpose. Thus the Wisconsin statute should provide immunity for all activities related to that purpose of competing in games on Saturday, including practicing on Thursday. Same with che

This also is why I somewhat depart from Marc’s analysis. He makes much of the difference between those squads that engage in competitive cheerleading and those that merely are the “spirit squad” (leading cheers at games). But if competition is irrelevant to the definition of sport (assuming the Department of Education were to adopt the same definition for Title IX), it also is irrelevant whether a team engages in competitive cheering or spirit. Both are sports–activities involving physical exertion and skill, governed by a set of rules or customs. And what else falls within that broad definition? Dance team? Yes. Marching band? Why not. And with no requirement of competition or scoring, much less objective scoring, we do not even have to reach whether a particular band or team participates in competitions or not to define the activity as sport.

And that makes the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s definition of sport problematic for us in Title IX. For one thing, we have to think about Title IX not only as to NCAA participation, but also for participation in high-schools and middle-schools, all of which are bound by Title IX to provide athletic opportunities to females. In fact, these schools have the real burden and obligation, because this is where a truly substantial number of girls will be able to take advantage of opportunities to play sports–they have the time, they are more likely to have the skill level (compared with the ability at the collegiate level), and the greater number of schools nationwide means greater opportunities for more girls. But any definition of sport that includes band, dance, and cheer–all worthwhile activities, to be sure–potentially undermines Title IX by helping schools out of their obligation to provide meaningful sporting opportunities for women. If a school can satisfy its Title IX obligations through band and cheerleading (activities in which women historically have participated in large (even predominant) numbers), it has no incentive to also provide new opportunities for women, such as lacrosse or tennis. Band and cheerleading and dance keep the school in Title IX compliance because schools can point to those as existing opportunities for female participation, without having to add anything new.

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