Cardozo Law Review
Vol. 12, Iss. 6
On October 28, 1990, the Jacob Burns Institute for Advanced Legal Studies at Cardozo Law hosted an in-depth, full-day conference titled The Jurisprudence of Justice Antonin Scalia. This event explored various facets of Justice Scalia's legal philosophy from multiple perspectives, offering a comprehensive examination of his influential judicial approach.Prefatory Matter
Articles
My Pizza With Ninó
Alex Kozinski
Justice Scalia’s Textualism: The “New” New Legal Process
Nicholas S. Zeppos
Comment: Legal Process and Judges in the Real World
Peter L. Strauss
Tradition, Precedent, and Justice Scalia
David A. Strauss
Scalia and the Dormant Commerce Clause: A Foolish Formalism?
Mark V. Tushnet
Putting the Dormancy Doctrine Out of Its Misery
Richard D. Friedman
Judicial Asceticism
Larry Kramer
Justice Scalia’s Jurisprudence and the Good Society: Shades of Felix Frankfurter and the Harvard Hit Parade of the 1950’s
Peter B. Edelman
Notes
The Social Security Administration’s Representative Payee Program: An Act of Benevolence or Cruelty?
Melissa Reiner Greener
Book Reviews
Judicial Reputation Evaluated: The Cardozo Instance
Michael H. Cardozo
On Cardozo and Reputation: Legendary Judge, Underrated Justice?
Richard D. Friedman
Reputology
William Powers Jr.
Cardozo, the Idea of the Great Judge, and the Theory of Adjudication
David A.J. Richards
Citation Studies - The Missing Background
Virgil L.P. Blake
Citation Studies - Measuring Rods of Judicial Reputation?
Keith Ann Stiverson and Lynn Wishart