The Last Progressive: Justice Breyer, Heller, and 'Judicial Judgment' ( 
http://ssrn.com/abstract=1287615 )  
Syracuse Law Review, Forthcoming
Richard C. Schragger
University of Virginia - School of Law
 
 
 
Abstract:
This paper considers Justice Breyer's dissent in District of Columbia v. Heller 
- in which the Court established an individual right to bear arms - as a 
species of progressive jurisprudence. By progressive, I do not mean a political 
program but rather an approach to how the Supreme Court views its role and its 
work. Progressive jurisprudence was developed in the shadow of the relative 
formalism of the classical jurists and forged in the pragmatic philosophical 
tradition at the turn-of-the-century. Progressive judges eschewed absolutist 
constitutional claims; their decisions were fact-based, attentive to changing 
social conditions, and deferential to legislatures. That progressive attitude 
has been in decline for some time, for it comes from a conception of the judge 
that is at odds with two twentieth century jurisprudential trends. The first 
trend is the idea that rights should be understood as trumps, defined in 
opposition to the public interest. The second trend is a pervasive skepticism 
that legislatures or courts do or can ascertain and implement the public 
interest in the first place. This skepticism has generated repeated efforts to 
cabin judicial discretion out of a concern that judges are simply engaged in 
politics by another name. Justice Scalia - the author of the majority opinion 
in Heller - is deeply skeptical of legislative or judicial attempts to arrive 
at an honest assessment of the public good. Justice Breyer is less so; the 
"problem" of judicial power that Scalia's originalism attempts to solve is 
simply less of a concern for him.
 
 
 
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Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.                        o-  651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law (MS-D2037)         f-   651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                                      c-  612-865-7956
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                               
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