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Event

2020 Jorde Symposium: The New Countermajoritarian Difficulty

Legal practitioners and experts will discuss the Supreme Court’s reluctance to reinforce representation through judicial review at a time when the United States appears to be heading toward a period of anti-majoritarian control.

Past:
This is a virtual event
Speakers:
  • Pamela Karlan
  • ,
  • Nick Stephanopoulos
  • Franita Tolson
Jorde Symposium

Pamela Karlan (Stanford Law) will deliver a lecture on the “countermajoritarian” difficulty, reflecting on the Supreme Court’s reluctance to reinforce representation through judicial review at a time when the United States appears to be heading toward a period of anti-majoritarian control due to a combination of structural factors (including the Electoral College and the guarantee of equal suffrage in the Senate) and sociological ones (including geographic polarization due to sorting).

Nick Stephanopoulos (Harvard Law) and Franita Tolson (USC Gould School of Law) will serve as commentators.

This event is hosted in partnership with the Brennan Center for Justice and Berkeley Law. Information on past Jorde Symposia can be found on the Brennan Center’s website. RSVP here.

SPEAKERS:

  • Pamela KarlanKenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law and Codirector, Supreme Court Litigation Clinic, Stanford Law School
  • Nick Stephanopoulos, Professor Law, Harvard Law School
  • Franita Tolson, Vice Dean for Faculty and Academic Affairs and Professor of Law, USC Gould School of Law