At the end of the day, our hope with State Court Report is to create a forum to analyze and put in context developments in state constitutional law at a time when it is getting much more attention. Our State Case Database is one more tool to help do that.
With the State Court Report launch today, I'm particularly excited about our new State Case Database, where we collect the most significant recent decisions in state constitutional law, and the briefs behind them.
Here's a short 🧵 about the database
I am thrilled to introduce State Court Report, a new resource & commentary hub covering constitutional developments across the 50 states. State courts & constitutions are important sources of rights. Let's give them the attention they deserve. https://t.co/n7AlW1WHm0
Why would a judge or advocate care about an opinion or briefs from another state? For one, the drafters of state constitutions themselves borrowed from other states, so anyone interpreting their own constitution may benefit from seeing how peers treated similar provisions
The database is also searchable by issue area and by state - a law student in Georgia can do a deep dive on the Georgia Supreme Court or see what courts across the country have been doing about state constitutional provisions guaranteeing the right to education
Why are the briefs important? Our hope is that advocates across the country can learn from one another's work, that academics and law students can better study state litigation, and that journalists can get a deeper look at cases they are reporting on
And, because she cannot thank herself, I want to be clear that we're here thanks to the incredible vision and leadership of @alicia_bannon . I'm so lucky to work with and learn from you!
I am thrilled to introduce State Court Report, a new resource & commentary hub covering constitutional developments across the 50 states. State courts & constitutions are important sources of rights. Let's give them the attention they deserve. https://t.co/n7AlW1WHm0
And more! We're just getting started, so look forward to more commentary about state constitutional development from more voices, more judicial interviews, and more coverage of major cases.
If you want to receive next month's newsletter, sign up here:
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We just published issue #2 of the State Court Report newsletter!
As always you can sign up here: https://t.co/90mRJHzH7f
The newsletter includes timely news and commentary about state constitutional development in state courts. Here's what's inside this month🧵
And this fascinating interview w/ Washington Chief Justice Gonzalez:
"It can do violence to require someone imagine themselves to be a slave owner who didn’t believe women had equal rights in order to understand what the Constitution means." https://t.co/pHt1sCpKSs