A Volokh post that gives another overview can be found here
New from @kewhittington.bsky.social and me: "Demystifying Birthright Citizenship" lays out our understanding of the meaning of the Citizenship Clause at adoption, the common law rule, and our historical assessment of various alternative arguments. Comments welcome!
New from @kewhittington.bsky.social and me: "Demystifying Birthright Citizenship" lays out our understanding of the meaning of the Citizenship Clause at adoption, the common law rule, and our historical assessment of various alternative arguments. Comments welcome!
Paper here: papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
Ben Keener and I have posted a new paper on the original meaning of the Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. This one provides an extended analysis of the English common law origins of the ...
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Executive Order 14160 and the litigation it generated in Trump v. Barbara have thrust birthright citizenship back to the center of American constitutiona
Whittington and Heilpern on the Citizenship Clause and Birthright Citizenship
Keith E. Whittington (Yale University Law School) and James Heilpern (Georgetown University Law Center) have posted “Subject To The Jurisdiction” As Legal Text on SSRN. Here is the abstract: The Citizenship Clause of the…
Not doing much social media these days, but will note that I have a new paper with @btkeener.bsky.social posted on SSRN on birthright citizenship. Can be found at papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.... 1/
Benjamin Keener, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, and Keith E. Whittington,
Yale Law School, have posted Demystifying Birthright Citizenship:
Executive Order 14160 and the litigation it generated in Trump v. Barbara have thrust birthright citizenship back to the center of American constitutional debate. Critics of the traditional rule argue that the Fourteenth Amendment's “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” language implicitly restricts birthright citizenship in ways that exclude the American-born children of undocumented immigrants and temporary visitors. This Article clears the brush. It demystifies birthright citizenship by demonstrating that the Citizenship Clause embodies a single, coherent rule with deep roots in the common law—one that is neither riddled with ad hoc exceptions nor susceptible to the narrowing constructions its modern critics advance.
Working from an originalist methodology, this Article reconstructs the traditional rule and systematically rejects principal arguments for a more restrictive reading. Part I begins with a note on methods and how we believe an originalist analysis of the Citizenship Clause should proceed. Part II lays out the original meaning of the birthright citizenship rule and the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment that constitutionalized that rule. We then canvass the evidence in support of a more restrictive reading of the rule. Parts III and IV examine the argument that only those who have been invited into the country and are present by the country’s consent are subject to its jurisdiction. Part V examines the argument that only those who have the requisite allegiance to the country are subject to its jurisdiction. None finds sufficient support in the original meaning of the text.
--Dan Ernst
Keith E. Whittington (Yale University Law School) and James Heilpern (Georgetown University Law Center) have posted “Subject To The Jurisdiction” As Legal Text on SSRN. Here is the abstract: The Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees citizenship to all persons born in the United States and “subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” This Article challenges the allegiance-based model by applying an original public meaning framework to the Citizenship Clause.
New from @kewhittington.bsky.social and me: "Demystifying Birthright Citizenship" lays out our understanding of the meaning of the Citizenship Clause at adoption, the common law rule, and our historical assessment of various alternative arguments. Comments welcome!
Kathleen Commons
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Executive Order 14160 and the litigation it generated in Trump v. Barbara have thrust birthright citizenship back to the center of American constitutiona