Law School

Constitutional Law Part Four: Due Process - Life, Liberty, and Property

Jan 22, 2026
Dive into the intricate world of due process with a focus on the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. Discover key distinctions between procedural and substantive due process, and learn about critical legal analyses like the Matthews v. Eldridge balancing test. Explore landmark cases shaping individual rights, from Griswold v. Connecticut to Lawrence v. Texas. The hosts tackle debates around fundamental rights and delve into privacy and reproductive rights. This insightful discussion concludes with a roadmap for navigating due process in legal exams.
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INSIGHT

Determine Which Due Process Clause Applies

  • The due process clause appears in both the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments but applies to different actors.
  • Ask first whether the federal or state government took the action to pick the correct clause.
ADVICE

Split Procedural And Substantive Analysis

  • Separate procedural due process (how) from substantive due process (what) when analyzing a problem.
  • Treat procedural claims as challenges to the process and substantive claims as challenges to the law itself.
ADVICE

Use The Two-Step Procedural Framework

  • For procedural due process, first ask whether a protected interest (life, liberty, or property) was deprived.
  • If no protected interest exists, stop—there is no constitutional due process claim.
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