Courtly Observations is a recurring series by Erwin Chemerinsky that focuses on what the Supreme Court’s decisions will mean for the law, for lawyers and lower courts, and for people’s lives. […] ...
The New Republic on MSNOpinion
John Roberts and the Cynical Cult of Federalist No. 70
Alexander Hamilton’s treatise on executive power is one of the conservative legal movement’s favorite texts to quote—and ...
The Sun on MSNOpinion
The urgency of State Police
Again, given the extensive work that went into Ekweremadu’s Bill for the Creation of State Police, the National Assembly has ...
Simplified In Short on MSNOpinion
Types of government around the world explained
From democracies to dictatorships, federal systems to unitary states, this video breaks down every major form of government ...
The Court's right-wing bloc sounds ready to axe independent federal agencies—and the precedents that guard them.
The Roberts court has been an accomplice in the president’s blatant attempts to bypass the Constitution’s limits on his power ...
The Print on MSNOpinion
Ambedkar wanted to split, UP, MP, Bihar, Maharashtra. What lessons does it hold today?
Ambedkar carefully considered North-South differences when making India's federal structure. He believed that federalism ...
NPR's Leila Fadel asks legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen how a Supreme Court case over the firing of Rebecca Slaughter, a Democratic FTC commissioner, could expand presidential powers.
Opinion
The Business & Financial Times on MSNOpinion
Towards a new governance architecture: A synthesis of global lessons and national pathwaysTop of Form
By \xa0Kilo MIKEGhana at a Governance CrossroadsGhana’s Fourth Republic has provided stability and regular, peaceful transitions of power. However, the underlying constitutional framework concentrates ...
Nigeria's 15-year Boko Haram fight is troubling. He calls for specialized training and modern tech for the military.
Our heroic lower court judges, and the Justice Department’s war on the only group blocking Trump’s extra-legal push.
No one in Congress should be so powerful as to dictate presidential appointments. As for the expansion of executive power, ...
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