December 2005: The Living Constitution: Amendments for the 21st Century

Lead Essay
» Three Amendments: Responsibility, Generality and Natural Liberty by James M. Buchanan
Reaction Essays
» Reply by Akhil Reed Amar
Yale Law School professor Akhil Reed Amar says Buchanan's essay offers a "veritable feast" for thought, but he turns up his nose at the menu, arguing that Buchanan's amendments are either insufficiently supported by theory and evidence, likely to lead to distasteful consequences, or so indefinite in formulation that it is hard to say whether or not they could be made feasible.
» Reply by Alex Kozinski
Judge Alex Kozinski of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit maintains that an America that would ratify Buchanan's proposed amendments would be an America that didn't need them. They may not be the best ideas even if feasible, he argues. Under the nondiscrimination amendment, Kozinski predicts, “we’d have Bush v. Gore going on 365 days a year, all over the country."
» Reply by William A. Niskanen
Cato Institute chairman William A. Niskanen agrees with Buchanan about ends, but disagrees about means. Niskanen offers fixes for Buchanan's amendments and sets forth three tantalizing alternative amendments: have state legislatures — once again — elect U.S. Senators, allow the states to nullify federal law, and allow states to secede.
The Conversation
» Response to Comments by James M. Buchanan
» Notes on the 17th Amendment and States' Rights by Akhil Reed Amar
» Odds and Ends by William A. Niskanen
» Senators and the 17th by Akhil Reed Amar
» Call Me a Panglossian by Alex Kozinski
» One More Round: The 17th and Constitutional Interpretation by William A. Niskanen
» A Few Final Thoughts on Constitutional Federalism by Akhil Reed Amar
Best of the Blogs
» Public Opinion, Judges, and Constitutional Stability
Related Content in the Cato Institute Archives
» Related at Cato: December 2005
» By The Editors on December 28th, 2005
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