Debating constitutional issues at WSU Law

– Photo by Steve Thorpe


Wayne State University Law School recently presented “Originalism v. Living Constitutionalism: The Debate.” It featured Professor Lee J. Strang (left) of the University of Toledo Law School offering the Originalist view and Wayne Law’s own Professor Robert A. Sedler (right) with the Living Constitution viewpoint. Both are acknowledged experts on constitutional issues. “Originalism, from the 10,000 foot level, is the idea that the publicly understood meaning of the Constitution’s text, when it was ratified, is its authoritative meaning,” Strang told the audience. Sedler argued that the understanding and interpretation of the Constitution must evolve as time passes, saying that, for example, “The ‘value’ that is constitutionalized in the text of the 14th Amendment is the value of equality. The meaning of equality changes with the time and the meaning of ‘equal protection’ changes with it.”

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