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Constitutional Law: Cases, Materials, and Problems Sixth Edition: 2024 Case Supplement

Authors
  • Russell L. Weaver
  • Steven I. Friedland
Series / Supplements
Teaching Materials
NO
Description
Table of contents
This is the 2024 case supplement to Constitutional Law: Cases, Materials, and Problems, Sixth Edition by Russell L. Weaver and Steven I. Friedland.

The 2024 Supplement is an essential resource for students and professors as an update to Constitutional Law: Cases, Materials, and Problems, Sixth Edition, providing excerpts from recent scholarship and from important new decisions of the Supreme Court—including major cases on government power/authority, standing to challenge regulatory action, the Appropriations Clause, fundamental liberty interests, due process, gerrymandering, free speech, and the right to bear arms.

New to the 2024 Supplement:
● Edited copies of important new Supreme Court decisions, including:
  • Federal Bureau of Investigation v. Firke
  • Biden v. Nebraska (standing)
  • Food and Drug Administration v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine (standing to challenge regulatory actions)
  • Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Community Financial Services Association of America, Ltd. (Appropriations Clause)
  • Trump v. Anderson (a state's right to determine eligibility for federal office)
  • Department of State v. Muñoz (fundamental liberty interest)
  • Culley v. Marshall (due process)
  • Alexander v. South Carolina State Conference of the NAACP (gerrymandering)
  • City of Grants Pass v. Johnson (cruel and unusual punishment)
  • National Rifle Association v. Vullo (free speech)
  • Murthy v. Missouri (free speech)
  • Trump v. United States (Presidential immunity)
  • DeVillier v. Texas (takings clause)
  • United States v. Rahimi (right to bear arms)

Professors and students will benefit from:
● The ability to digest, analyze and understand the most recent Supreme Court decisions on issues involving Constitutional Law
● New court decisions released after the publication of the latest casebook edition
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Professor Materials
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About the authors
Russell Weaver
University of Louisville

Professor Russell L. Weaver graduated cum laude from the University of Missouri School of Law in 1978. He was a member of the Missouri Law Review, was elected to the Order of the Coif, and won the Judge Roy Harper Prize. After law school, Professor Weaver was associated with Watson, Ess, Marshall & Enggas in Kansas City, Missouri, and worked for the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of General Counsel in Washington, D.C. Professor Weaver began teaching at the Louis D. Brandeis School of Law in 1982, and holds the rank of Professor of Law and Distinguished University Scholar. He teaches the First Amendment, Constitutional Law, Advanced Constitutional Law, Remedies, Administrative Law, Criminal Law, and Criminal Procedure. He has received the Brandeis School of Law's awards for teaching, scholarship, and service, and has been awarded the President's Award (University of Louisville) for Outstanding Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity in the Field of Social Science, the President's Award for Outstanding Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity in the Career Achievement Category, and the President's Award for Distinguished Service. He is an Honorary Associate of Macquarie University Law School (Sydney, Australia). He was named the Judge Spurgeon Bell Distinguished Visiting Professor at South Texas College of Law (affiliated with Texas A&M University) during the 1998-99 academic year, and he held the Herbert Herff Chair of Excellence at the Cecil C. Humphreys School of Law, University of Memphis, during 1992-93.

Professor Weaver is a prolific author who has written dozens of books and articles over the last 25 years. In addition, he has been asked to speak at law schools and conferences around the world, and has been a visiting professor at law schools in France, England, Germany, Japan, Australia, and Canada. Professor Weaver is particularly noted for his work in the constitutional law area, especially his writings on free speech. In addition to authoring From Gutenberg to the Internet: Free Speech, Advancing Technology and the Implications for Democracy, and The Right to Speak Ill, he served as a consultant to the constitutional drafting commissions of Belarus and Kyrgyzstan and as a commentator on the Russian Constitution. He has also authored a Constitutional Law casebook (with Aspen Publishing), a First Amendment casebook (with LexisNexis), Understanding the First Amendment (LexisNexis), a Criminal Procedure casebook (West), a Criminal Law casebook (West), an Administrative Law casebook (West), and a Tort casebook (LexisNexis).

Professor Weaver has served on many community and professional committees. He is the Executive Director and a member of the Board of Trustees (as well as a past president) of the Southeastern Conference of the Association of American Law Schools. He has also served on the American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky's Legal Panel and Board of Directors. He served on the Louisville Bar Association's (LBA) Professional Responsibility Committee, as Chair of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Criminal Justice Section, and has served on the AALS Planning Committee for the New Law Teachers Workshop.

Steven Friedland
Elon University

Steven Friedland was a founding faculty member at Elon Law School after teaching at several other schools, including the University of Georgia and Georgia State University, as well as Nova Southeastern University (NSU) in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., where he served as a professor of law for more than a decade.

Friedland was elected to the American Law Institute in 2010, named to the board of trustees for the Law School Admissions Council in 2012, and to the Lexis Publishing Company Advisory Board the same year. He has received teaching awards at three different law schools, as well as a "teacher of the year" award for all of NSU.

Friedland has co-authored several Constitutional Law, Evidence Law, and Criminal Procedure textbooks, as well as three books on law school teaching. He is a national leader and speaker on law school teaching, and has advised the Japan Legal Foundation about starting law schools in Japan and Afghanistan law professors as part of a U.S. A.I.D. project on law teaching in that country. He was one of twenty-six law teachers included in the Harvard University Press book by Michael Hunter Schwartz and Gerry Hess, What the Best Law Teachers Do.

While in practice, he served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. At Elon, he is director of the Center for Engaged Learning in the Law (CELL). He is on the Board of Advisors for the Institute for Law School Teaching and has taught in the North Carolina Leadership Academy and the Florida Judicial College.

Friedland has a bachelor’s degree from the State University of New York at Binghamton, a juris doctor degree from Harvard Law School, and a master of laws and a doctor of jurisprudence degree from Columbia Law School, where he was a Dollard Fellow in Law, Medicine, and Psychiatry.

Product Information
Publication date
2024-09-12
Copyright Year
2024
Pages
100
Connected eBook (Digital Only)
9798892077033
Subject
Constitutional Law
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