2024 Bissel-Heyd Symposium - American Constitutionalism in Crisis?

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Thursday, May 9th, 2024 – Friday, May 10th, 2024

DateTimeLocation
Thursday, May 9, 20243:00PM - 6:30PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event will take place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto
Friday, May 10, 20248:30AM - 6:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event will take place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto
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Description

As the United States hurtles towards the 2024 presidential election, the integrity of its constitutional system faces serious questions. The last several years alone have brought both jurisprudential revolution and legislative gridlock; democratic backsliding and enervated governance; deepening partisan division and disappearing common ground; an attempted insurrection and protracted efforts to hold those responsible to account. In turn, these challenges have fuelled a range of proposed solutions, from disempowering the Supreme Court and bolstering electoral democracy to retrenching national power and reviving an assertive federalism. Against this fraught backdrop, the 2024 Bissell-Heyd Symposium will probe the question raised by these developments: Is American constitutionalism in crisis? Engaging this topic requires clarifying what crisis entails, as well as identifying both past cases and present causes of constitutional infirmity. Animated by the conviction that such questions are best answered by situating contemporary American constitutional politics within both historical and comparative context, the symposium will feature three keynote speakers: Maggie Blackhawk (New York University Law School), Jonathan Gienapp (Stanford University), and Rogers Smith (University of Pennsylvania). These addresses will be complemented by a series of thematic panels probing the meaning, history, and dimensions of constitutional crisis.

 

Schedule

Thursday, May 9

 

3:00pm-3:15pm Introduction

 

3:15pm-4:45pm Panel 1: What is Constitutional Crisis?

 Connor Ewing, University of Toronto

 Ran Hirschl, University of Toronto

 Victoria Nourse, Georgetown University Law Center

 

4:45pm-5:00pm Break

 

5:00pm-6:30pm Keynote 1: “America’s Conflicting Constitutional Visions: The Quest for Common Ground,” Rogers Smith, University of Pennsylvania

 

Friday, May 10

 

8:30am-9:00am Breakfast

 

9:00am-10:20am Panel 2: Constitutional Crisis in Historical Perspective

 Zachary Elkins, University of Texas at Austin

 Max Mishler, University of Toronto

 Emily Zackin, Johns Hopkins University

 

10:20am-10:30am Break

 

10:30am-12:00pm Keynote 2: “The Constitution of American Colonialism,” Maggie Blackhawk, NYU Law School

 

12:00pm-1:00pm Lunch & Break

 

1:00pm-2:20pm Panel 3: Dimensions of Crisis

 Yasmin Dawood, University of Toronto

 Rob Goodman, Toronto Metropolitan University

 Robert Schertzer, University of Toronto

 

2:20pm-2:30pm Break

 

2:30pm-4:00pm Keynote 3: “The Crisis of History in U.S. Constitutional Interpretation,” Jonathan Gienapp, Stanford University

 

 Organized by the Centre for the Study of the United States, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy at the University of Toronto. Co-sponsored by the Department of Political Science, the David R. Cameron Distinguished Professorship in Law and Politics and the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy.

 


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