Justice Breyer’s Principled Pragmatism and Kagan’s New Living Constitutionalism and Lite Textualism

Authors

  • Rachel Rein Columbia Law School

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15168/tslr.v4i1.2075

Keywords:

Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, statutory interpretation, Breyer, Kagan

Abstract

This article is a comparative study of United States Supreme Court Justice Breyer and Kagan's methods of judicial interpretation. By juxtaposing and comparing the justices' jurisprudence, this article aspires to clarify their methods and raise questions for further analysis. This article posits that the core of Breyer's interpretative methods is pragmatism. However, Breyer does account for values and purposes. Thus, he is a "principled pragmatist" for both constitutional and statutory interpretation. On the other hand, Kagan exercises a "new" living constitutionalism in her constitutional interpretation but interprets statutes as a "lite" textualist. Paragraph 1 introduces the article. Then, Paragraph 2 studies what Breyer and Kagan claim to be. Next, Paragraph 3 interrogates Breyer and Kagan's judicial methods in practice. Finally, based on the justices' methods, Paragraph 4 provides theories on what Breyer and Kagan may focus on in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, involving one of the United States' most contentious contemporary debates about abortion.

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Published

30.04.2022 — Updated on 27.05.2022

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How to Cite

Rein, Rachel. (2022) 2022. “Justice Breyer’s Principled Pragmatism and Kagan’s New Living Constitutionalism and Lite Textualism”. Trento Student Law Review 4 (1). Trento, Italy:17-36. https://doi.org/10.15168/tslr.v4i1.2075.

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Section

Articles