CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
W.B. Fisch, Fall 2003
Assignment #25
2. Protection of Personal Liberties
A. Introduction
GRISWOLD V. CONNECTICUT, p. 565 (1965)
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What regulation, with what purpose?
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Who is challenging the regulation? Do the challengers have
standing?
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have they been injured by the challenged regulation?
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are they intended beneficiaries of the constitutional provision
they invoke?
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if not, on what basis are they allowed to proceed?
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What constitutional right is asserted against the regulation?
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Is it an enumerated right? If not, how does the Court determine
that it exists?
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what provision of the constitution is invoked as directly
protecting this right?
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what role does the 9th Amendment play in the Court's analysis
(Goldberg)?
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contrast the approaches of Douglas and Harlan
(relevant portion of his opinion set forth below), who agree on
result
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is Douglas's "interpretive" (i.e., text-based)?
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is Harlan's "non-interpretive" (i.e. based on extra-textual
values)?
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What standard of review is applied?
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Is this decision consistent with those which in effect overruled
Lochner?
B. Family and Marital Relationships
MOORE V. CITY OF EAST CLEVELAND, p. 571 (1977).
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what action is being challenged, and what is its purpose?
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what standard of review is applied by the majority?
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does this decision follow from Griswold? from Meyers
and Pierce?
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if the city's concern is legitimate, how could it approach
the problem after this case?
MICHAEL H. V. GERALD D., p. 584 (1989).
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what state law is being challenged, and what is its purpose?
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who is challenging the law?
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what standard of review does the Court apply?
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why is the challenge unsuccessful?
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because no fundamental right is involved? if not, how is
the case different from Griswold and Moore?
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because the wrong people are challenging it? is that the
same kind of objection?
Harlan, J., in a portion of his opinion in Griswold
not quoted in the casebook:
"In my view, the proper constitutional inquiry in this
case is whether this Connecticut statute infringes the Due Process Clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment because the enactment violates basic values
'implicit in the concept of ordered liberty'***. For reasons stated at
length in my dissenting opinion in Poe v. Ullman, [handout for
assignment #6] I believe that it does. While the relevant inquiry may
be aided by resort to one or more of the provisions of the Bill of Rights,
it is not dependent on them or any of their radiations. The Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment stands, in my opinion, on its own bottom..
***
"Judicial self-restraint will not, I suggest, be brought
about in the 'due process' area by the historically unfounded incorporation
formula long advanced by my Brother BLACK, and now in part espoused by
my Brother STEWART. It will be achieved in this area, as in other constitutional
areas, only by continual insistence upon respect for the teachings of history,
solid recognition of the basic values that underlie our society, and wise
appreciation of the great roles that the doctrines of federalism and separation
of powers have played in establishing and preserving American freedoms.
*** Adherence to these principles will not, of course, obviate all constitutional
differences of opinion among judges, nor should it. Their continued recognition
will, however, go farther toward keeping most judges from roaming at large
in the constitutional field than will the interpolation into the Constitution
of an artificial and largely illusory restriction on the content of the
Due Process Clause."