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Browse all 6 articles across governance, urban systems, ecologies, and latitudes.

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governance

When Courts Erase the Spanish Map

In recent years, the Supreme Court has asked judges to test certain rights and regulations against 'history and tradition.' The words feel neutral, even comforting—like walking the family farm before making a will. But methods make worlds. A jurisprudence that privileges a particular.

Oct 2, 202520 min
governance

The Bench of Mirrors: Conservative Judicial Activism and the Roberts Court

In American law, 'activist' is the powdered sugar we throw on the bench when we want to make someone else's footprints more visible than our own. Since the 1980s, the conservative legal movement has acted with strategic purpose—first under 'New Federalism,' then through the Roberts Court's project.

Sep 15, 202520 min
governance

How 'Originalism' Became a Power Grab

Call it the constitutionalist's promise: decide by text, history, and structure rather than by vibe or partisan appetite. In principle, that's healthy. In practice, on the current Supreme Court, the methods deliver outcomes that lean the same direction over and over—and create a new vision of the.

Sep 1, 202518 min
governance

The Court That Rewrote America

The Roberts Court before and after 2020—how a jurisprudence of 'tradition' remapped power, rights, and the administrative state. Historians will draw a clean fold in the timeline of the Roberts Court. On one side (2005–2019): incrementalism with sharp elbows.

Jul 14, 202524 min
governance

The Art of Calling Someone Else an Activist

Conservative judging since the 1980s—and the paradox of a movement that won by denouncing its own reflection. The term 'judicial activism' is the judiciary's favorite insult and our public square's dullest knife. Everyone uses it to describe the decisions they don't like; few define it before.

Jun 30, 202522 min
governance

The Activists Who Said They Weren't

How a conservative legal movement rewrote American law from the 1980s to today. For forty years, the conservative legal movement has sold a deceptively simple ethic: judges should interpret, not make, the law. The method was restraint; the result was revolution.

Jun 26, 202522 min