
How Originalism Ate The Law: The Trap
Amicus With Dahlia Lithwick | Law, justice, and the courts
Challenges of Turning Judges into Historians
Lower court judges are required to follow Supreme Court precedent, even if the approach is flawed. Expecting judges to become historians without proper training and resources leads to a difficult and unmanageable situation. Many judges and law school graduates lack the expertise to analyze and apply historical context in legal rulings. Recent lower court opinions, including one from the Hawaii Supreme Court in State V Wilson, highlight the impracticality of expecting judges to navigate complex historical analysis in legal decisions.
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