Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Goluboff on Fundamental Rights in the Justices' Papers

[I'm moving this post up, as Professor Goluboff's essay has now been published, ungated, here.]

Risa Goluboff, University of Virginia School of Law and Department of History, has posted on bepress Dispatch from the Supreme Court Archives: Vagrancy, Abortion, and What the Links Between them Reveal about the History of Fundamental Rights, which is forthcoming next year in the Stanford Law Review. Here is the abstract:
This Essay explores the implications for constitutional history of several documents I found in the archives of Supreme Court Justices William O. Douglas, William J. Brennan, Jr., Thurgood Marshall, Potter Stewart, and Harry Blackmun. In particular, I discuss (1) portions of an early draft of Justice Douglas’s opinion in the 1972 vagrancy case of Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville; (2) memoranda from Justices Brennan and Stewart about that opinion; and (3) memoranda between Justices Brennan and Douglas about Roe v. Wade. These documents—which I have reproduced in an appendix—shed new light on several apparently disparate issues in constitutional law: the Supreme Court’s use of void-for-vagueness doctrine; the social and constitutional history of vagrancy law; the possibility and contours of constitutional regulation of substantive criminal law; the relationship between Papachristou and Roe; and the development and conceptualization of substantive due process. These documents invite us to think both more deeply and more broadly about who was engaged in constructing the intellectual framework of modern fundamental rights, about where in the constitution such rights would be located, and about what the contours of such rights would be.