The Use and Misuse of History in U.S. Foreign Relations Law (Fall 2008)
Volume 53, Number 1
Prefatory Matter
Foreword
Article
An Originalism for Foreign Affairs?
Ingrid Wuerth
Responses
Foreign Affairs Originalism in Youngstown’s Shadow
Stephen I. Vladeck
Originalism and the Difficulties of History in Foreign Affairs
Eugene Kontorovich
Article
The Civil War in U.S. Foreign Relations Law: A Dress Rehearsal for Modern Transformations
Thomas H. Lee
Responses
Contemporary Lessons From the Age-Old Prize Cases: A Comment on The Civil War in U.S. Foreign Relations Law
Deborah Pearlstein
Re-Rethinking the Prize Cases: Some Remarks in Response to Professor Lee
Stephen I. Vladeck
Article
Taking Care of John Marshall’s Political Ghost
Michael P. Van Alstine
Response
Organs Misused and Used: A Comment on the Sole Organ Problem
Martin S. Flaherty
Article
Responses
Affecting Foreign Affairs Is Not the Same as Making Foreign Policy: A Comment on Judicial Foreign Policy
A. Mark Weisburd
The Founders’ Foreign Affairs Constitution: Improvising Among Empires
Daniel J. Hulsebosch