masthead


  NELLCO Repository Home

Customized Email Alerts by Subject Area

Search

My Account

NELLCO Home



poweredbybepress

 

   logo

Available Papers  •  Georgetown Law Web Site  •  Search the Collection  •  Policies
NELLCO LSR > GEORGETOWN > FWPS > PAPERS bealert

The People or the State?: Chisholm V. Georgia and Popular Sovereignty
Randy E. Barnett, Georgetown University Law Center

Virginia Law Review, Vol. 93

Suggested Citation: Barnett, Randy E., "The People or the State?: Chisholm V. Georgia and Popular Sovereignty" . Virginia Law Review, Vol. 93

Download the Paper (PDF format) - March 13, 2007 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
Chisholm v. Georgia was the first great constitutional case decided by the Supreme Court. In Chisholm, the Court addressed the fundamental question: Who is Sovereign? The People or the State? It adopted an individual concept of popular sovereignty rather than the modern view that limits popular sovereignty to collective or democratic self-government. It denied that the State of Georgia was a sovereign entitled, like the King of England, to assert immunity from a lawsuit brought by a private citizen. Despite all this, Chisholm is not among the canon of cases that all law students are taught. Why not? In this essay, I offer several reasons: Constitutional law is taught by doctrine rather than chronologically; law professors have reason to privilege the Marshall Court; and the Court's individualist view of popular sovereignty is thought to have been repudiated by the adoption of the Eleventh Amendment. I explain why the Eleventh Amendment did not repudiate the view of sovereignty expressed in Chisholm by comparing the wording of the Eleventh with that of the Ninth Amendment, and conclude by suggesting another reason why Chisholm is not in the canon: Law professors follow the lead of the Supreme Court and, like the Ninth Amendment, the Supreme Court has deemed its first great decision too radical in its implications.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Randy E. Barnett, "The People or the State?: Chisholm V. Georgia and Popular Sovereignty" (March 13, 2007). Georgetown Law. Georgetown Law Faculty Working Papers. Paper 21.
http://lsr.nellco.org/georgetown/fwps/papers/21




REPOSITORY HOME  | SEARCH  | MY ACCOUNT  | NELLCO HOME |
Powered by bepress.