Posted by David Bernstein:
AEI Lochner Event Next Friday--Mark Your Calendars:

   Next Friday, I, along with (fellow Yale Law '91 alum) Jeff Rosen of
   G.W. and Ted White of U. Va., will be participating in an AEI panel
   discussion ([1]register here) on Lochner v. New York: Still Crazy
   After All These Years? Here are the details:

   In Lochner v. New York (1905), the Supreme Court�discovering a right
   to contract in the Fourteenth Amendment�invalidated a New York statute
   setting maximum working hours for bakery employees. A century later,
   Lochner still stands as one of the most widely despised decisions in
   the Court's entire history. Conservatives denounce it as a prime
   example of "substantive due process" run wild�judicial invention
   paving the way for Roe v. Wade and its offspring. With equal fervor,
   liberals criticize the Lochner Court's perceived attempt to write
   laissez faire economics into the Constitution. But does Lochner
   deserve its lousy reputation? Or are these modern perceptions a
   product of dubious historical scholarship? What exactly is Lochner's
   legacy?

   10:00 a.m. Registration

   10:15 Panelists: David E. Bernstein, George Mason University School of
   Law Jeffrey Rosen, George Washington University School of Law G.
   Edward White, University of Virginia School of Law

   Moderator: Michael S. Greve, AEI

   Noon Adjournment

   Hope to see some VC readers there.

References

   1. 
http://www.aei.org/events/type.upcoming,eventID.1056,filter.all/event_detail.asp

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