Panel 1: FOUNDATIONS
The U.S. Constitution Is Not a Code: Unraveling the Idea and the Meaning of Substantive Due Process by Simona Grossi, Loyola Law School, Los Angeles
An Originalist Theory of Due Process of Law by Randy E. Barnett, Georgetown University Law Center
Panel 2: ENDANGERED LIBERTIES
The Fundamental Right to Free Movement by Noah Smith-Drelich, Chicago-Kent College of Law
Renewing Educational Authority by Johanna Kalb, University of Idaho College of Law
Death After Dobbs by Kathy Cerminara, Shepard Broad College of Law, Nova Southeast University
Panel 3: THE COURTS
State Constitutional Rights, State Courts, and the Future of Substantive Due Process Protections by Jonathan Marshfield, University of Florida Levin College of Law
“Constraining and Licensing Arbitrariness: The Stakes in Debates about Substantive-Procedural Due Process” by Judith Resnik, Yale Law School and Helen Hershkoff, NYU
“A Civil Right to Counsel: The Protector of Substantive Rights” by John Pollock, National Coalition for a Civil Right to Counsel
Panel 4: DEMOCRACY
Failures in the Laboratories of Democracy and Substantive Due Process by F. Paul Bland, Jr. and Matthew C. Clifford, Public Justice
From Liberation to (Re)Criminalization: Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, Bodily Autonomy, and the Expansion of State Rights by Robin Maril, Willamette University College of Law
Panel 5: ENFORCEMENT OF SDP RIGHTS
Secrecy and Transparency in Substantive Due Process Litigation by Dustin Benham, Texas Tech University School of Law
Challenges in Substantive Due Process Litigation by Nancy Leong, Sturm College of Law, University of Denver