Discriminatory Permissions Doctrine and the Structure of Constitutional Authority and Responsibility – Part 2

​Please join us for a two-part lunchtime talk with Professor Lawrence Sager, Distinguished Scholar in Residence, UCLA Law and Philosophy Program & Visiting Professor.

March 4, 2020

12:15 PM – 1:30 PM
UCLA School of Law
Room 1347

This is the second of a two-part lunchtime series, co-sponsored with the UCLA Law and Philosophy Program.

In the second lecture, Professor Sager will further develop a “discriminatory permissions doctrine” and respond to several possible critiques of it, deepening understanding of key concepts that underly constitutional authority and responsibility.

Presenter
Professor Lawrence Sager
Professor Lawrence Sager

Distinguished Scholar in Residence, UCLA Law and Philosophy Program & Visiting Professor

Professor Sager is one of the nation’s preeminent constitutional theorists and scholars. Professor Sager went to Texas from New York University School of Law, where he was the Robert B. McKay Professor and Co-Founder of the Program in Law, Philosophy & Social Theory. Professor Sager was a Professor of Law at UCLA from 1966 to 1971. He has also taught at Harvard, Princeton, Boston University, and the University of Michigan. Professor Sager is the author or co-author of dozens of articles, many now classics in the canon of legal scholarship. He the author of two books: Justice in Plainclothes: a Theory of American Constitutional Practice (Yale Univ. Press), and Religious Freedom and the Constitution (with Christopher Eisgruber) (Harvard Univ. Press).

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