『Dissed』のカバーアート

Dissed

Dissed

著者: Pacific Legal Foundation
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Supreme Court dissents have it all: brilliant writing, surprising reasoning, shade, puns, and sometimes historic impact. Although they are necessarily written by the "losing" side, they’re still important: they can provide a roadmap for future challenges or persuade other justices. Sometimes they're just cathartic.

In Dissed, attorneys Anastasia Boden and Elizabeth Slattery dig deep into important dissents, both past and present, and reveal the stories behind them.


Twitter: @EHSlattery @Anastasia_Esq @PacificLegal

Email us at Dissed@pacificlegal.org




Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Pacific Legal Foundation
世界 政治・政府 政治学
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  • NEW PODCAST: In Dissent with Anastasia Boden
    2026/05/22

    Hungry for more? Join Anastasia Boden for season one of the new In Dissent podcast.


    In Dissent traces the founding ideals of the Declaration of Independence from the revolutionary moment of their birth to the courtrooms where they’ve been tested, twisted, and sometimes abandoned. Each episode pairs vivid historical storytelling—a man riding through the night to break a deadlocked vote, a printer setting type for a document that could get him hanged—with landmark Supreme Court cases that reveal the distance between America’s founding promise and its legal reality.


    Now streaming on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music, and Ricochet.


    Learn More: https://indissent.org

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1分未満
  • Lady Justice Isn’t Blind
    2023/07/19

    Lady Justice is often depicted wearing a blindfold, signifying that judges are neutral arbiters of the law. Unfortunately, thanks for a judicial doctrine known as Chevron deference, the Supreme Court has required judges to peek from behind that metaphorical blindfold and put a thumb on the scale for the most powerful litigant in our nation: the federal government. In a case called Brand X, the Court took Chevron deference to its logical conclusion, allowing agencies to overrule judicial decisions. One dissenter wrote that this was not only bizarre, but it was probably unconstitutional. That view has been picking up steam in the past decade. Next term, the Court will hear a case asking it to overturn Chevron deference.


    Thanks for our guests Aditya Bamzai and Jeff Wall.


    Follow us on Twitter @ehslattery @anastasia_esq @pacificlegal #DissedPod

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    46 分
  • A Ripsnorting Dissent
    2023/04/05

    The government’s deprivation of life, liberty, or property is legitimate only if preceded by certain procedural protections—better known as due process of law. This includes reasonable notice of the rules so citizens can know and follow them. But a 1947 Supreme Court decision gave the burgeoning administrative state the ability to create new rules with retroactive application, through a process known as adjudication. A dissent by Justice Robert Jackson—who was no enemy of the administrative state—lambasted the Court for failing to scrutinize this action.

    Thanks to our guests John Barrett and Joe Postell.

    Follow us on Twitter @ehslattery @anastasia_esq @pacificlegal #DissedPod

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    40 分
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