State Constitutionalism Symposium, Issue 115:4, Released

Issue 115:4 Released
Symposium: State Constitutionalism in the 21st Century

Penn State Law Review is proud to announce that Volume 115, Issue 4 is now available. This issue features the following articles from the State Constitutionalism in the 21ST Century Symposium:

  • Introduction by Gary S. Gildin & Jamison Colburn
  • Path Dependence and the External Constraints on Independent State Constitutionalism by Lawrence Friedman
  • Some Thoughts About State Constitutional Interpretation by Jack L. Landau
  • Redressing Deprivations of Rights Secured by State Constitutions Outside the Shadow of the Supreme Court’s Constitutional Remedies Jurisprudence by Gary S. Gildin
  • State Courts and Constitutional Socio-Economic Rights: Exploring the Underutilization Thesis by Helen Hershkoff & Stephen Loffredo
  • Judicial Federalism and the Challenges of State Constitutional Contestation by Robert A. Schapiro
  • State Constitutional Amendment Processes and the Safeguards of American Federalism by John Dinan
  • What State Constitutional Law Can Tell Us About the Federal Constitution by Joseph Blocher
  • Human Rights Treaties in State Courts: The International Prospects of State Constitutionalism After Medellin by Johanna Kalb
  • Change That Matters by Daniel B. Rodriguez
  • Constitutional Revision: Are Seriatim Amendments or Constitutional Conventions the Better Way to Amend a State Constitution? by Ann M. Lousin
  • Teaching and Researching Comparative Subnational Constitutional Law” by Robert F. Williams; “Explaining Sub-National Constitutional Space by G. Alan Tarr
  • Models of Subnational Constitutionalism by Jonathan L Marshfield.

Read this issue.