Law School

Constitutional Law Part Four: Due Process - Life, Liberty, and Property

9 snips
Jan 22, 2026
Dive into the intricate world of due process with a focus on the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. Discover key distinctions between procedural and substantive due process, and learn about critical legal analyses like the Matthews v. Eldridge balancing test. Explore landmark cases shaping individual rights, from Griswold v. Connecticut to Lawrence v. Texas. The hosts tackle debates around fundamental rights and delve into privacy and reproductive rights. This insightful discussion concludes with a roadmap for navigating due process in legal exams.
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INSIGHT

From Lochner To Deference On Economics

  • The Lochner era used substantive due process to protect economic liberty, a practice largely rejected after 1937.
  • Modern law defers to legislatures on economic regulation under rational basis review.
INSIGHT

Bifurcated Standard Controls Review

  • Substantive due process uses a bifurcated standard: rational basis for non-fundamental rights and strict scrutiny for fundamental rights.
  • Strict scrutiny requires a narrowly tailored law serving a compelling state interest and is very hard for government to meet.
ADVICE

Use Glucksburg's History Test For Fundamentals

  • To decide if a right is fundamental, apply Washington v. Glucksburg's test: deeply rooted in history and implicit in ordered liberty.
  • Use that historical analysis on exams to justify invoking strict scrutiny.
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