Scrutinizing the second amendment.
Michigan Law Review
Page: 683
ISSN: 0026-2234; Volume 105; Issue 4
February 2007
Byline: Adam Winkler 
One overlooked issue in the voluminous literature on the Second
Amendment is what standard of review should apply to gun control if
the Amendment is read to protect an individual right to bear arms.
This lack of attention may be due to the assumption that strict
scrutiny would necessarily apply because the right would be
"fundamental" or because the right is located in the Bill of Rights.
In this Article, Professor Winkler challenges that assumption and
considers the arguments for a contrary conclusion: that the Second
Amendment's individual right to bear arms is appropriately governed by
a deferential, reasonableness review under which nearly all gun
control laws would survive judicial review. Professor Winkler's
discussion is informed by the example of state constitutional law,
where the individual right to bear arms is already well established. 
Forty-two states have constitutional provisions guaranteeing an
individual right to bear arms and, tellingly, every state to consider
the question applies a deferential reasonable regulation standard in
arms rights cases. No state applies strict scrutiny or any other type
of heightened review to gun laws. Since World War II, the state courts
have authored hundreds of opinions using the reasonable regulation
test to determine the constitutionality of all sorts of gun control
laws. All but a fraction of these decisions uphold gun control laws as
reasonable measures to protect public safety. If the federal courts
follow this universal practice of the state courts and apply the
reasonable regulation standard, nearly all gun control laws will
survive judicial review. Moreover, as Professor Winkler argues, even
if the federal courts decide to apply strict scrutiny, most weapons
laws might still be upheld due to the overwhelming governmental
interest in public safety. If so, then any eventual triumph of the
individual-rights reading of the Second Amendment is likely to be more
symbolic than substantive. 


 
 
 
Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.         o-  651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law             f-   651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                        c-  612-865-7956
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                               
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