- Randy Barnett
Randy E. Barnett (born
February 5 ,1952 ) is a lawyer, a law professor atGeorgetown University Law Center , and a legal theorist in theUnited States . He writes about the libertarian theory of law andcontract theory , constitutional law, andjurisprudence .After attending
Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, andHarvard Law School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Barnett worked as aprosecutor inChicago , Illinois. Barnett's first academic position was at theChicago-Kent College of Law of theIllinois Institute of Technology . He later became the Austin B. Fletcher Professor of Law atBoston University , where he served as the faculty adviser for theFederalist Society . He joined the faculty ofGeorgetown University Law Center in 2006. Barnett is a Senior Fellow of theCato Institute and theGoldwater Institute . His book "The Structure of Liberty " won the Ralph Gregory Elliot Book Award in 1998.Jurisprudence
In "
The Structure of Liberty ", Randy Barnett offers alibertarian theory of law and politics. Barnett calls his theory "the liberal conception of justice", emphasizing the relationship between legal libertarianism andclassical liberalism . Barnett argues that private adjudication and enforcement of law, withmarket forces eliminating inefficiencies and inequities, is the only legal system that can provide adequate solutions to the problems of interest, power, and knowledge.Barnett discusses theories of constitutional legitimacy and methods of constitutional interpretation in "Restoring the Lost Constitution".
There have been several criticisms and reviews of Barnett's theory, including:
* N. Stephen Kinsella, "Knowledge, Calculation, Conflict, and Law", 2 "Quartlerly Journal of Austrian Economics". 49 (1999).
* Richard Epstein, "The Libertarian Quartet", "Reason Magazine ", Jan. 1999.
* David N. Mayer, Book Review, "The Structure of Liberty", 20 "Cato Journal". 279 (2000).
* Lawrence B. Solum, Book Review, "The Structure of Liberty: Justice and the Rule of Law", 97 Mich. L. Rev. 1780 (1999)
* John K. Palchak & Stanley T. Leung, "No State Required? A Critical Review of the Polycentric Legal Order", 38 GONZ. L. REV. 289 (2002)Constitutional theory
Barnett has also done work on the theory of the
United States Constitution , culminating in his book "Restoring the Lost Constitution ". He argues for an originalist theory ofconstitutional interpretation , and for constitutional construction based on apresumption of liberty (notpopular sovereignty ).Barnett was also a lead lawyer for the plaintiffs in "
Gonzales v. Raich ", which won a victory before theNinth Circuit , ruling that federal action against legal marijuana patients violated the Commerce Clause. Barnett's side, however, lost when the Supreme Court ruled onJune 6 ,2005 , that Congress had the power to prevent states from legalizingmedical marijuana .Barnett also focuses on the history and original meaning of the Second and Ninth Amendments to the United States Constitution. Barnett has advanced the view that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to bear arms, albeit one subject to federal regulation under Congress's power to organize the militia in of the Constitution.
Ninth Amendment
Barnett is a proponent of the view that the Ninth Amendment's rights "retained by the people" should be vigorously enforced by the federal judiciary. In a 2006 article, Barnett wrote: [Randy Barnett, [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=789384 The Ninth Amendment: It Means What It Says] , 85 Texas Law Review 1 (2006)]
Regarding what stature and force natural rights had before some of them were enumerated, Barnett says that federal courts did not have authority to enforce such rights against the states. He wrote in the same 2006 article:
A related issue is whether the original unamended Constitution gave federal courts authority to enforce unenumerated natural rights against congressional regulation of the federal district. Barnett has given different answers to this question. On the one hand, Professor Barnett has indicated that federal courts "did" have such authority, when he said that enumerated rights "had the same stature and force" in the district even before they were enumerated. On the other hand, Barnett has indicated that the case of "
Bolling v. Sharpe " (dealing with integration of public schools in the District of Columbia) should perhaps be overturned, which suggests that federal courts "did not" have authority to enforce natural rights against congressional regulation of the federal district. [Legal Affairs Debate Club, [http://legalaffairs.org/webexclusive/debateclub_cie0505.msp#Wednesday "Constitution in Exile? Cass Sunstein and Randy Barnett Debate."] (May 4, 2005)]The question of what constitutional rights citizens possessed in the federal district has ramifications for the meaning of the
Privileges or Immunities Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. In 2003, Professor Barnett wrote: [Randy Barnett, [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=437201 Proper Scope of the Police Power] , 79 Notre Dame Law Review 429 (2004)]If no such federal constitutional protection of unenumerated rights existed in the federal district prior to the Fourteenth Amendment, then only enumerated rights may have been extended by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Contract theory
Barnett also writes about contract theories. In that field he has advanced a theory of contract formation that emphasizes the intention to be bound as the key to contract law. He also has worked on the idea of a
default rule , i.e. a rule of contract law that binds the parties if their contract does not cover the eventuality or condition that is the subject of the default rule.Criticism
Austrian School economist and libertarian legal theoristWalter Block has criticized Barnett's reasoning for his challenge to the legality of thedeath penalty , which Barnett reasons are illegitimate because the individual's right to life is inalienable and therefore "non-forfeitable" even in cases where the forfeiture is through voluntary action on the part of the individual. Block argues that by this reasoning, evensuicide ought to be illegal since such an act constitutes a forfeiture of one's life. [Block, Walter. "A Libertarian Theory of Inalienability: A Critique of Rothbard, Barnett, Smith, Kinsella, Gordon, and Epstein." "Journal of Libertarian Studies". Volume 17, no. 2. Spring 2003. [http://www.mises.org/journals/jls/17_2/17_2_3.pdf] ]Biographical information
Barnett is married to Beth Barnett and they have one son, Gary, and one daughter, Laura. Gary Barnett attends
Georgetown University Law Center , while Laura Barnett currently lives in Washington, D.C. and works for the [http://www.theihs.org/ Institute for Humane Studies] .Barnett also teaches a Contracts course to first year students at
Georgetown University Law Center .Footnotes
Bibliography
Books
*"" (2004)
*"" (1998)
*"Contract Cases and Doctrine " (1995, 2ed 1999, 3ed 2003)
*"Perspectives on Contract Law " (1995, 2ed 2001)Articles
*Randy Barnett, [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=422564 "Justice Kennedy's Libertarian Revolution: Lawrence v. Texas"] (Social Science Research Network 2003).
*Randy Barnett, "Restitution: A New Paradigm of Criminal Justice" ("Ethics" 87, no. 4, July 1977).Movies
* InAlienable (2008)ndash Assistant to Crystal Barry (
Marina Sirtis ) ( [http://www.inalienablethemovie.com "InAlienable" website] )See also
*
Libertarian theories of law
*Libertarianism
*Classical liberalism
*Contract theory
*Default rule
*Philosophy of law
*Lawrence v. Texas
*Lysander Spooner External links
* [http://randybarnett.com RandyBarnett.com]
* [http://www.randybarnett.com/SOL.htm The Structure of Liberty]
* Co-blog ger at [http://volokh.com volokh.com]
* [http://lysanderspooner.org/ LysanderSpooner.org] (page set up by R. Barnett)
*
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