October 6, 2006
Constitutional Fidelity over Time and Democratic Legitimacy
Lisa Schultz Bressman
Co-Director of the Regulatory Program and Professor of Law, Vanderbilt University Law SchoolBegin: 0:00
Frank I. Michelman
Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard Law SchoolBegin: 1:18
Rebecca L. Brown
Allen Professor of Law at Vanderbilt Law SchoolBegin: 26:38
Robin West
Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law CenterBegin: 43:15
ACS and Vanderbilt University Law School present videos from the "Keeping Faith with the Constitution in Changing Times" Conference, co-sponsored by ACS and Vanderbilt University Law School in Nashville, Tennessee, October 6-7, 2006. This conference, an integral part of our Constitution in the 21st Century project and its Constitutional Interpretation and Change Issue Group, kicked off a major effort by ACS to affect the way lawyers, policymakers, advocates and students think and talk about the Constitution. This conference was a thought-provoking, highly substantive, and inspiring event, given the array of speakers that attended and the importance of topics that were addressed. The Conference featured seven panels over two days discussing issues such as the originalism debate; the roles of history, text and democratic legitimacy in constitutional interpretation; judicial perspectives on constitutional decision-making; and utilizing and communicating theories of constitutional interpretation in legal advocacy and to the public. A number of leading practitioners and academics addressed the conference.
Constitutional Fidelity over Time and Democratic Legitimacy featuring:
- Moderator, Lisa Schultz Bressman, Co-Director of the Regulatory Program and Professor of Law, Vanderbilt University Law School
- Rebecca L. Brown, Allen Professor of Law at Vanderbilt Law School
- Frank I. Michelman, Robert Walmsley University Professor, Harvard Law School
- Robin West, Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center