Harvard Federalist Society
@HarvardFedSoc
Conservative & libertarian law students at Harvard Law School. We stand for rigorous debate, intellectual freedom & diversity, and the rule of law.
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https://orgs.law.harvard.edu/fedsoc/ 24-03-2012 01:22:32
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An honor and pleasure to serve for the last year as president of Harvard Federalist Society, and a joy to pass the torch today to my friend Brecken Denler, who has done excellent work coordinating a first-rate speakers program all year.
NEW MINISODE: Why Separate Powers? Our podcast team shares what they saw at the Federalist Society National Student Symposium at Harvard Federalist Society earlier this month and what it portends for judicial supremacy in particular
anchoringtruths.org/2024/03/18/min…
Grateful to the law school for this nice write-up of the conversation between Cass Sunstein and Judge Kethledge that kicked off last week's @fedsoc student symposium!
hls.harvard.edu/today/sunstein…
A fantastic symposium by our friends at Harvard Federalist Society last weekend on “Why Separate Powers?”
Prof. Harrison spoke on the Judicial Power panel, Prof. Aditya Bamzai won the Jospeh Story Award, and we’re thrilled to have received our 5th Feddie—this time for Membership Growth!
This separation of powers conversation was legitimately excellent. Thx to Chris Walker, Eli Nachmany, Jed Shugerman + Judge Elrod for serious candid discussion of delegation, exec power, MQD, Chevron, & forgetting case names
🧵 w topic bookmarks follows: 1/youtube.com/watch?v=P4KMLB…
Nice thread by Beau J. Baumann on my remarks on Saturday -- and the story I'm telling that may be 'Administrative Law Americana' for folks like Baumann or 'Administrative Law Pollyanna' for folks like Phillip Hamburger. 👇
And a big congratulations to our friends at UChicago Fed Soc on winning student chapter of the year—we’re delighted to pass this torch to a most worthy successor!
This weekend at Federalist Society Student Symposium at Harvard Federalist Society, I did a separation-of-powers panel with legends: Jed Shugerman, Julian Davis Mortenson, Chris Walker, and Judge Elrod.
Here, I answer a question about needing independent agencies for policy that requires long-term planning. 🧵