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    overrule

    Explore "overrule" with insightful episodes like "Go Home Admin Law, You're Drunk", "It's Concurring Opinion Season", "Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Hyatt Decision??", "Sovereign Deliverance Through Godlessness (Audio)" and "Sovereign Deliverance Through Godlessness (Video)" from podcasts like ""The Citizen's Guide to the Supreme Court", "The Citizen's Guide to the Supreme Court", "The Citizen's Guide to the Supreme Court", "Grace Baptist Church | Cape Coral" and "Grace Baptist Church | Cape Coral"" and more!

    Episodes (6)

    Go Home Admin Law, You're Drunk

    Go Home Admin Law, You're Drunk

    It's a tough week for small government, as the Auer doctrine, the 21st Amendment, and local business associations all took one on this chin from the Supreme Court.  Brett and Nazim discuss agency deference in Kisor v. Wilkie, and the Dormant Commerce Clause's effect on residency requirements for alcohol licenses in Tennessee Wine and Spirits Board v. Thomas.  Law starts at (10:20).

    Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Hyatt Decision??

    Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Hyatt Decision??

    It's finally decision season, and Brett and Nazim are covering two cases with broader implications for the future.  First is Apple v. Pepper, which deals with conservative and evolutionary approaches to anti-trust common law, and the second is Franchise Tax Board v. Hyatt, which deals with whether or not a controversial Constitutional interpretation should be overruled.  Law starts at (09:09).

    Talking Affirmative Action with the President

    Talking Affirmative Action with the President




    No, not that President. Another president, and one who knows a great deal about the subject: Jonathan R. Alger, the new President of James Madison University. In his old job as Assistant General Counsel at the University of Michigan, President Alger oversaw two of the most important affirmative action cases in U.S. history. Those two cases - Grutter and Gratz - emphasized the importance of diversity in higher education. And those two cases might get reversed this term.

    Is educational diversity a constitutional basis for affirmative action programs in college and university admissions? Join us for the inside story of the Grutter and Gratz cases, and what might happen to them when the the Supreme Court decides Fisher v. the University of Texas.
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