Andy Hessick

2.3K posts

Andy Hessick

Andy Hessick

@AndyHessick

Interim Dean at the University of North Carolina. Research includes federal courts, administrative law, and some aspects of criminal sentencing.

Katılım Nisan 2015
211 Takip Edilen2.3K Takipçiler
Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
@OrinKerr Totally agree. Incompletely theorized agreements often rule the day.
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Orin Kerr
Orin Kerr@OrinKerr·
One reason I'm skeptical of grand theories of constitutional interpretation is that Supreme Court Justices do not write opinions in most cases. They usually join the opinions of others. This creates a practical way out of a theory, in that no one pays much attention when a Justice with one set of theoretical commitments joins opinions based on different commitments reaching results that may be difficult or impossible to justify based on the joining Justice's professed theory.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
Waking up to an unexpected and excellent draft from a coauthor is the best.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
Sirius just listed Billy Mack as the singer of Xmas is all Around and it feels right.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
@OrinKerr None in a straight up easy syllogism. But definitely a preference comes before the application of the doctrine. For example, whether to accept the doctrine in the first place or to challenge it or seek to change it etc.
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Orin Kerr
Orin Kerr@OrinKerr·
@AndyHessick Interesting. What is the personal preference on which a purely doctrinal argument rests?
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Orin Kerr
Orin Kerr@OrinKerr·
One of the things I often see in scholarship on public law, or at least in criminal procedure, is what you might call The Reference Problem. The author wants more of Right X, but needs to root the argument for more X in something beyond the author's preference. So there's a somewhat unexplained choice of reference point to make the argument seem like a neutral claim to align with the reference point. Maybe the claim is that Right X needs to be interpreted more broadly to match some shared value. (Ok, but usually a value is not really all that widely shared, or else there would already be more Right X.) Or maybe it's to match the promise of some famous case. (OK, but there are other cases, and why prioritize that one case over the others?) Or maybe it's to make the law more coherent or to reconcile the law of Right X with the law of other rights. (OK, but why change the law of Right X to match that of other rights, and not the other rights to match the current law of Right X?) The key challenge in a lot of these papers, it seems to me, is justifying the reference point.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
@OrinKerr I’m deeply skeptical of anything over 5000 words. Including my own work.
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Andy Hessick retweetledi
Orin Kerr
Orin Kerr@OrinKerr·
Editors, the length of law review articles is mostly on you. My 2 cents: Be skeptical of long submissions. If it *has* to be long, okay. But law review authors have been known strategically bury their point in an endless sea of pages. That's not a good thing. Don't reward that.
Orin Kerr@OrinKerr

A lot of law review articles could be a lot shorter than they are, which would make them easier to read and more likely to be read.

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Judge Bob Orr
Judge Bob Orr@JudgeBobOrr·
Great 9 holes of golf with grandchildren Annabel and Robby and son Rob at Kenmure in Hendersonville. You know you’re getting old when your granddaughter consistently out drives you.
Judge Bob Orr tweet media
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
SCOTUS’s recent standing decisions (diamond gutierrez) address standing when the remedy doesn’t undo the harm. The reason for the cases is that the injury in fact test is relatively new. Now that the court has fully adopted it, it needs to adjust the rest of standing doctrine.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
The court keeps charging down the path it set out for itself for standing law. Redressability is now satisfied if commonsense says that relief is predicable instead of speculative. No well-defined test here. Redressability turns on vibes about the possible effects.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
@wrdcsc More than once I’ve had families tell me that a speech upset them and marred the graduation. I feel awful for them. The ceremony is for all, but not everyone shares the same views.
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Fr. Bill Dailey, CSC
Fr. Bill Dailey, CSC@wrdcsc·
I’m sorry, but university valedictorian addresses are not political platforms. Student speakers who break agreements to avoid division are not victims of oppression when they are held to account. Not a free speech issue. Let families celebrate without rancor, or take the penalty.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
AI just told me that Alexander Bickel was a judge on the second circuit . . . 😞
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
Per the discussion that the 22d amendment has a loophole for vice presidents: the constitution has lots of loopholes. The one in the 22d is not particularly big compared to some of the others.
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
What are the worst legal doctrines--with "worst" defined in no particular way? The intelligible principle doctrine gets my vote this morning. "You can't legislate, full stop---except we will let you legislate"
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Andy Hessick
Andy Hessick@AndyHessick·
A good illustration of the court ditching originalism when it is inconvenient. Common law courts historically recognized actions on the case for violations of codified rights.
Carissa Byrne Hessick@CBHessick

@pjaicomo If the Supreme Court hadn’t neutered Bivens, then there’d be a cause of action, wouldn’t there?

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