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Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
Mark Tushnet, Louis Michael Seidman
31 episodes
1 day ago
Sitting in their marble palace, dressed in their black robes, Supreme Court Justices would like us to believe that they are wise and disinterested oracles dispensing words of truth and justice. Nothing could be further from the truth. Every episode week, Mark Tushnet and Mike Seidman, two renown constitutional law scholars, lift the curtain and show us how the men and women there who sit on the High Court have been manipulating us.
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News
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All content for Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America is the property of Mark Tushnet, Louis Michael Seidman and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Sitting in their marble palace, dressed in their black robes, Supreme Court Justices would like us to believe that they are wise and disinterested oracles dispensing words of truth and justice. Nothing could be further from the truth. Every episode week, Mark Tushnet and Mike Seidman, two renown constitutional law scholars, lift the curtain and show us how the men and women there who sit on the High Court have been manipulating us.
Show more...
News
History,
Government
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Constitutional Criminal Procedure
Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
59 minutes 22 seconds
3 months ago
Constitutional Criminal Procedure
Today we apply our way of thinking about the Constitution—what we’ve been calling constitutional theory—to a topic that isn’t usually discussed in those terms even though it gets a lot of attention: constitutional criminal procedure, focusing on police practices like stop-and-frisk and on the Miranda warnings. As usual our questions are about the connection between judicial (and political and bureaucratic) regulation of police practices and the people’s ability to govern itself. And as usual we divide (a bit) over whether courts have made things better, whether they’ve actively made things worse by exacerbating the race-based inequalities produced by the politics of crime, and whether the courts might come up with better ways of regulating police conduct that would enhance self-government.
Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
Sitting in their marble palace, dressed in their black robes, Supreme Court Justices would like us to believe that they are wise and disinterested oracles dispensing words of truth and justice. Nothing could be further from the truth. Every episode week, Mark Tushnet and Mike Seidman, two renown constitutional law scholars, lift the curtain and show us how the men and women there who sit on the High Court have been manipulating us.