I mean.... some institutions have a culture on this issue that is impossible to fight. I have small classes and repeat students and a casual campus culture and so I stopped fighting to go by professor. Right out of grad school I wanted to go by professor to have some social distance, but less so now
25.11.2025 23:00 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
This is a really bad comparison!
20.11.2025 19:37 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
If you'd like to read a better account of the separation of powersβunderstood as a political architecture rather than a legalistic doctrineβcheck out @trivesbell.bsky.social's wonderful new book.
20.11.2025 16:58 β π 10 π 5 π¬ 0 π 0
Thanks, Pat! I hope you enjoy it.
20.11.2025 03:44 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
This is a really excellent book -- anyone interested in American politics should give it a serious read.
18.11.2025 14:00 β π 27 π 7 π¬ 1 π 0
18.11.2025 14:16 β π 3 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
My intellectual debts are clear. My teacher @jktulis.bsky.social has taught me how to think about American politics more than anyone else. I have also benefitted immensely from the work and feedback of @joshchafetz.bsky.social and George Thomas, as well as Gary Jacobsohn, and H.W. Perry.
18.11.2025 13:55 β π 5 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
The book applies its analytical framework to case studies on the legislative veto, executive agreements, the appointments process, and congressional oversight and impeachment to demonstrate that institutional conflict rather than legal determinacy is an essential feature of the constitutional design
18.11.2025 13:50 β π 7 π 1 π¬ 1 π 0
I argue that the Supreme Court's separation of jurisprudence often enforces the separation of powers for its own sake, which represents an inversion of means and ends. Non-judicialized conflict is essential for the polity to achieve its unlimited and politically-contingent ends.
18.11.2025 13:49 β π 4 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
ππ₯³ Coming soon, with @trivesbell.bsky.social.
07.11.2025 23:20 β π 53 π 4 π¬ 2 π 1
19.04.2025 20:16 β π 2 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
My friend Tim designed this sign. Weβre printing yard signs where we live in Galesburg, IL. Feel free to print where you live, or to share widely on social media. This is a scandal.
19.04.2025 18:31 β π 9 π 3 π¬ 0 π 1
Weβre better than this. The rule of law matters.
19.04.2025 18:01 β π 9 π 1 π¬ 0 π 0
18.04.2025 18:15 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Super minor point, but I hate the use of the word βconvictionalβ in articles like these as it seems like an empty vessel.
13.02.2025 23:40 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 1 π 0
Truth
13.02.2025 17:31 β π 1 π 0 π¬ 0 π 0
Constitutional law and national security law etc at the University of Glasgow
Senior writer at Slate covering courts and the law. Co-host of the Amicus podcast. Dad.
Lawyer, veteran. Ex-baby historian, current litigator, lapsed social scientist, still playing TTRPGs. Unabashedly pro-cat because cats are awesome. Various thoughts, some well articulated in πΊπ²/π©πͺ.
πChicago, IL, Vereinigte Staaten, Terra
Teaches (law and society, political theory at SLAC in New England) and bakes. Occasionally writes on all things related to conservative movement.
Assistant professor, University of Houston Law Center. I write about democracy and the separation of powers. ssrn.com/author=3062912
Professor, Harvard Kennedy School | Speaking in a personal capacity | https://msen.scholars.harvard.edu/
Associate professor of law at University of Oklahoma College of Law. Researching constitutional law, criminal law, and legal oddities.
https://law.ou.edu/node/716
Political Science Professor at Marquette. APD, Constitutional Law + history & Administrative Law. Writing a book on the Steel Seizure case. Contributor, @liberalcurrents.com
https://patsobkowski.com/
Milanovich Fellow, UCLA Law | Ph.D. in History, Stanford | J.D., Stanford Law | Indian Law Scholar and Legal Historian | Okie | Chahta | Queer | he/him/his
Scholarly publisher of American history, congressional studies, military history, environmental studies, natural history, political science, constitutional studies, Kansas regional, Great Plains and the Midwest, legal history, presidential studies, & more
Visiting Assistant Professor, Chicago-Kent College of Law. Previously Yale Law & ISP. Working on the First Amendment / constitutional law issues.
Research fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations studying terrorism and extremism. Opinions are my own and RT β endorsement.
https://bookshop.org/p/books/god-guns-and-sedition-far-right-terrorism-in-america/20097522?ean=9780231211222&next=t
Associate Prof at Northern Illinois University College of Law. Constitutional law, criminal law, abolition, philosophy, hoops, puppies (esp. Argo the Floof). βMildly Sephirothic at worst.β He/him.
Michigan Law Prof.
Co-host, Strict Scrutiny Podcast
Author, NYT Bestseller βLAWLESS: How the Supreme Court Runs on Conservative Grievance, Fringe Theories, & Bad Vibesβ
https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Lawless/Leah-Litman/9781668054628
Professor, NYU Law; scholar of Congress, the Constitution, and American colonialism; she/her/kwe.
Professor of Law, University of Texas. Habeas corpus, death penalty, some other law stuff, sentient space robots, kids who don't listen to me, and hot sauce.
BIO: https://law.utexas.edu/faculty/lee-kovarsky/
NYT Columnist, visiting professor at Lipscomb University. Married to @nancyfrench.bsky.social.
Iraq vet, Grizzlies fan, born in War Eagle Country and raised in Big Blue Nation.
Host of the Bulwark Podcast
MSNBC political analyst.
Punching bag on FYPod with Cameron Kasky.
Church of Jokic.
Nola Dad.
Weak and Gay.
Patriotic American. Former US Attorney, SDNY. Banned by Putin. Fired by Trump.
Dad, husband, CNN anchor, author, doorman to three dogs and a cat.