Posted by Jonathan Adler:
Nichol on "The Roberts Court and Access to Justice":
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_01_25-2009_01_31.shtml#1233420225


   The Roberts Court�s record on access to justice is more mixed than
   some critics recognize, and a greater (if rarely discussed) problem is
   that the economically disadvantaged lack equal access to justice in
   the United States, argued [1]UNC law professor Gene Nichol in his
   keynote address at the Case Western Reserve Law Review [2]symposium on
   �Access to the Courts in the Roberts Era.� While the Roberts Court has
   shown greater sympathy for federal preemption, refused to find implied
   causes of action in federal statutes, shrunken the availability of
   habeas corpus, turned away from facial challenges to federal statutes,
   and strictly enforced statutory limitations on suits, Nichol noted
   that the Roberts Court has expanded access to justice in other areas.
   In the enemy combatant cases, particularly in Boumediene, the Court
   bravely rejected the political branches� attempt to limit detainees�
   habeas claims, and cleared the way for a wave of gun rights lawsuits
   with D.C. v. Heller.

   Turning to standing, an area in which Nichol has written several
   important articles, he noted that the Roberts Court has done
   relatively little to curtail Article III standing. In Hein the Court
   refused to overrule Flast v. Cohen (even if it �treated it rudely�),
   and expanded the ability of states to sue in federal court in
   Massachusetts v. EPA. This Court�s failure to limit standing is
   perhaps notable because it appears to be an issue of great concern to
   the Chief Justice. In 1993, Roberts wrote an article defending the
   Lujan decision (and, interestingly enough) disagreeing with Nichol�s
   work in the area. Roberts had argued that the injury requirement was a
   politically neutral limitation on jurisdiction, limiting conservative
   and liberal interests alike.

   Nichol takes a different view, arguing that the Court has failed to
   develop and impose an Article III standing requirement in a neutral
   fashion. Application of Article III�s requirements has become little
   more than an �opaque labeling exercise.� Instead, the Court repeatedly
   goes through a �Bush against Gore shuffle� in which the standing
   requirements are are loosened or tightened depending on the justices�
   sympathy for the parties and views of the merits. In Nichol�s view,
   environmental plaintiffs and those challenging race-conscious
   government decisions have a relatively easy time satisfying standing
   requirements, while other plaintiffs with similarly diffuse or
   generalized concerns do not. In short, Nichol argued, standing, in
   practice, is not a neutral or apolitical limit on federal court
   jurisdiction.

   Nichol closed suggesting that most discussions of �access to justice�
   overlook some of the broader systemic problems faced by the
   economically disadvantaged. No matter what the Court may do on
   standing, the poor will continue to face greater obstacles in bringing
   their claims forward. Insofar as wealth can purchase greater legal
   talent � and that the ability to hire higher priced lawyers influences
   legal outcomes � Nichol suggests that lawyers and academics should
   have greater concern for the underlying inequities of the legal
   system. Expanding standing for elite environmental interests may be
   all well and good, but it does not address what Nichol believes is the
   greater �access to justice� issue.

References

   1. http://law.case.edu/lectures/index.asp?lec_id=177
   2. http://law.case.edu/lectures/agenda.asp?dt=20090130

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