Volume 96, Number 4 – July 2016
CONTENTS
SYMPOSIUM
A SYMPOSIUM ON RAN HIRSCHL’S COMPARATIVE MATTERS: THE RENAISSANCE OF COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
Big Questions Comparative Law
Anna di Robilant
Page 1325
How to Study Constitution-Making: Hirschl, Elster, and the Seventh Inning Problem
Tom Ginsburg
Page 1347
Comparative Constitutional Law, Legal Realism, and Empirical Legal Science
Vicki C. Jackson
Page 1359
On What Matters in Comparative Constitutional Law: A Comment on Hirschl
Katharine G. Young
Page 1375
Comparative Matters: Response to Interlocutors
Ran Hirschl
Page 1393
SYMPOSIUM
A SYMPOSIUM ON JAMES E. FLEMING’S FIDELITY TO OUR IMPERFECT CONSTITUTION: FOR MORAL READINGS AND AGAINST ORIGINALISMS
History, Rights, and the Moral Reading
Jack M. Balkin
Page 1425
A Nonoriginalism for Originalists
Jamal Greene
Page 1443
Reflections of an Empirical Reader (Or: Could Fleming be Right this Time?)
Gary Lawson
Page 1457
The Moral Reading as a Practice: A Response to Three Comments on Fidelity to our Imperfect Constitution
James E. Fleming
Page 1481
NOTES
The Evolution of Marriage: The Role of Dignity Jurisprudence and Marriage Equality
Jasmine J. Haddad
Page 1489
Why Dwyer Got it Wrong: A Call to Rebalance the Scale and Protect Absolute Privileged Communications Between Sexual Assault Victims and Counselors
Meagen K. Monahan
Page 1523