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Started Dec 11 2012, 04:36
Posts: 1473 |
Dec 11 2012, 04:36
Now, we tend to associate antiabortion constitutionalism with the judicial politics of the Right—with commitments to originals and judicial activism. In the aftermath of Roe, abortion opponents remained skeptical about the idea of originals (as late as 1977, activist and Fordham Professor Robert Byrne explained that the movement did not need to take a position on the question of judicial activism). Antiabortion attorneys themselves were diverse. Some, like Kenneth Vanderhoef, a Seattle attorney who had represented a local Catholic diocese, believed their religious and professional obligations to be inextricably connected. Others defined themselves as liberals, Reform Jews, or human rights attorneys.
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Ali
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