My final post in this series is entirely subjective: I picked 16 originalist-oriented articles from 2020 (that weren't on my other 2 lists), that were featured on the Originalism Blog, and that I thought were especially interesting. But probably I forgot some. Here they are:
Christine Kexel Chabot (Loyola Chicago), The Lost History of Delegation at the Founding
Travis Crum (Chicago), The Superfluous Fifteenth Amendment?
William Eskridge (Yale), Brian Slocum (McGeorge) and Stefan Gries (UC Santa Barbara – Linguistics), The Meaning of Sex: Dynamic Words, Novel Applications, and Original Public Meaning
Jeffrey Goldsworthy (Monash), Legislative Intentions in Antonin Scalia’s and Bryan Garner’s Textualism
Mark Graber (Maryland), Original Expectations
Gregory Maggs (George Washington), A Guide and Index for Finding Evidence of The Original Meaning of The U.S. Constitution in Early State Constitutions and Declarations of Rights
Jennifer Mascott (George Mason), Early Customs Laws and Delegation
James Macleod (Brooklyn), Finding Original Public Meanings
Mark Moller (DePaul) and Lawrence Solum (Georgetown [now Virginia]), Corporations and the Original Meaning of “Citizens” in Article III
Caleb Nelson (Virginia), Vested Rights, "Franchises," and the Separation of Powers
Farah Peterson (Chicago), Expounding the Constitution
James Phillips (Chapman) and John Yoo (Berkeley), You're Fired: The Original Meaning of Presidential Impeachment
Zachary Price (Hastings), Congressional Authority Over Military Offices
Scott Soames (USC – Philosophy), To What Should Originalists be Faithful
John F. Stinneford (Florida), Is Solitary Confinement a Punishment?
Kevin Tobia (Georgetown) and John Mikhail (Georgetown), Two Types of Empirical Textualism
Posted at 6:14 AM