{"title":"The Constitutional Law Series Warrior","description":null,"products":[{"product_id":"lost-justice-how-courts-abandoned-the-constitution","title":"Lost Justice: How Courts Abandoned the Constitution","description":"This book is based on the Case Law and Fundamental Laws going back to the foundation of this Country and how the United States Constitution is no longer honored and ignored in all United States Courts on a Federal and State level. This is especially true for the Federal Court System here in the United States where Federal Judges no longer honor their Oath of Office found at Title 5 U.S.C. § 3331, to up hold the Constitution of The Unitde States.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688464990281,"sku":"n4ykkj","price":59.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/95wn8pm-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970130"},{"product_id":"the-constitution-in-practice","title":"The Constitution In Practice","description":"The Constitution was ratified in 1789. What happened next is the story this volume tells. The Constitution in Practice traces the transformation of America's founding document from a spare framework of government into the living, contested, enormously consequential body of law that governs every aspect of American life today. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista walks the constitutional warrior through every major era of constitutional development: the Marshall Court's establishment of judicial review and national power; the antebellum collapse that produced Dred Scott; the Reconstruction revolution of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments; the Progressive Era and the rise of the regulatory state; the New Deal constitutional revolution; the Warren Court's reconstruction of individual rights from Brown through Miranda; the Burger and Rehnquist Court retreats; and the Roberts Court's ongoing originalist transformation that has produced Heller, Dobbs, Bruen, Students for Fair Admissions, Loper Bright, and Trump v. United States. \n\nFor the constitutional warrior, this historical depth is not background — it is the foundation of every argument. Understanding why the Court held what it held in landmark cases, understanding the intellectual forces and political pressures that shaped doctrine, understanding how precedent is made and unmade — this is the knowledge that distinguishes constitutional advocates from case-citters. \n\nThe Constitution in Practice delivers that knowledge in the clear, practitioner-grade prose that defines the entire Constitutional Law Series. Essential reading for every constitutional lawyer and every informed citizen who wants to understand the law under which they live.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465088585,"sku":"wx2yyn","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/7kdvjrm-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970157"},{"product_id":"roots-of-justice","title":"ROOTS OF JUSTICE","description":"Every American trial, every constitutional argument, every writ filed in a federal court rests upon a foundation built not in Philadelphia or Washington, but in the medieval halls of Westminster, the meadows of Runnymede, and the courts of a long succession of English kings. The rights Americans assert in court today — due process, habeas corpus, trial by jury, freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, the right to confront accusers — trace directly to the English common law tradition that the Founders inherited, transformed, and constitutionalized. Roots of Justice: The British Origins of American Law is Volume I of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering the historical foundation that every constitutional practitioner needs and most law schools no longer teach. From the Anglo-Saxon and Norman legal foundations through Magna Carta, the development of common law courts under Bracton and Coke, the Petition of Right, the Habeas Corpus Act, the English Bill of Rights, and the colonial legal tradition that carried these principles to America, this volume traces every foundational American right to its English origins. For the constitutional warrior, historical depth is not academic luxury — it is advocacy ammunition. Courts increasingly demand historical grounding for constitutional arguments. New York State Rifle \u0026amp; Pistol Association v. Bruen requires historical tradition analysis for Second Amendment claims. Dobbs reshaped substantive due process through historical lens. Understanding the founding-era meaning of constitutional text requires understanding the English legal tradition the Founders were translating into American constitutional form. Roots of Justice provides that foundation, written by a practitioner for practitioners and informed citizens, with the depth and clarity that the entire Constitutional Law Series is known for.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465121353,"sku":"7k8557","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/v87q826-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970177"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Warrior","description":"The Constitution is not self-executing. Rights not asserted are rights not enjoyed. And asserting constitutional rights effectively in federal court requires mastery of the procedural, evidentiary, and strategic dimensions of constitutional litigation that doctrinal study alone does not provide. The Constitutional Warrior: A Practical Guide to Asserting Your Rights Under the Constitution is Volume IV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, the practitioner's bridge between constitutional doctrine and constitutional victory. After three volumes of history, development, and critique, Volume IV delivers the integrated practice framework that transforms constitutional knowledge into constitutional results. Wayne Richard Evangelista covers the full arc of constitutional litigation: how to identify a constitutional claim and assess its viability; how to satisfy standing and exhaustion requirements that threshold doctrine demands; how to draft the complaint that survives a motion to dismiss under Iqbal and Twombly; how to conduct the discovery that develops the constitutional record; how to survive summary judgment against governmental defendants who invoke immunity doctrines; how to present the constitutional case at trial with the force and precision the stakes demand; and how to preserve constitutional claims for appellate review. For every client whose fundamental rights are at stake — whose home was searched without a warrant, whose property was taken without compensation, whose liberty was restrained without due process, whose speech was silenced by government coercion — competent representation is not enough. They need a Constitutional Warrior. This volume ensures you know how to be one. Written in the clear, practitioner-grade prose that defines the entire series, The Constitutional Warrior is the essential field manual for every lawyer who fights in federal court on behalf of constitutional rights.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465186889,"sku":"xx2555","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/yvrremz-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970192"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-states","title":"The Constitutional States","description":"The federal Constitution is a floor, not a ceiling. In state after state, constitutional provisions that track the language of the federal Bill of Rights have been interpreted by state courts to provide far greater protections for individual rights. State constitutions protect privacy where the federal Fourth Amendment does not. They protect economic liberty where Lochner's fall left federal doctrine silent. They require education funding equality where \"San Antonio v. Rodriguez\" declined to act. They protect reproductive rights where Dobbs withdrew federal protection. And they do so through enforceable constitutional commands, not merely aspirational principles. The Constitutional States: How State Constitutions Offer Greater Protection Than the Federal Bill of Rights is Volume V of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the practitioner's guide to the fifty parallel constitutional systems that operate alongside the federal Constitution and that, in crucial contexts, provide the stronger and more reliable protection for individual liberty. Wayne Richard Evangelista examines state constitutional provisions on search and seizure, free speech, privacy, due process, equal protection, property rights, education, and environmental rights, identifying where state courts have gone further than federal doctrine allows and giving practitioners the theory, the cases, and the advocacy skills to press state constitutional claims alongside federal ones. For the constitutional warrior who only litigates in federal court, this volume is the revelation of fifty untapped arsenals. State constitutional primacy doctrine, independent state grounds, state high court review, these are the mechanisms through which state constitutions deliver their superior protections, and this volume teaches you to use them.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465219657,"sku":"9dn228","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/2mdn5z2-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970206"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-family","title":"THE CONSTITUTIONAL FAMILY","description":"The family is the fundamental unit of a free society - and the Constitution has always recognized that. But, as government authority has expanded into schools, medical decisions, child custody proceedings,  and domestic living arrangements,  the constitutional warrior must know exactly where the Constitution draws the line.\n\n\"The Constitutional Family: The Complete Guide to Family Rights, Parental Authority, and the Constitution\" is Volume VI of Wayne Evangelista's landmark Constitutional Law Series - a comprehensive, practitioner-grade explanation of every constitutional protection that bears on family life in America. Constitutional lawyer, legal scholar, and Minister Wayne Richard Evangelista brings the same relentless rigor and advocacy orientation that defines the entire series to one of its most personal subject: the constitutional rights of parents, spouses, children, and families against an overreaching government. \n\nInside this 449 page volume, the constitutional warrior will find complete treatment of: the fundamental right to direct the education and upbringing of one's children under \"Meyer v. Nebraska\" and \"Pierce v. Society of Sisters\", Fourth Amendment protection of the family home and the constitutional limits on child welfare investigations; due process rights in family court proceedings including custody, termination of parental rights, and foster care; First Amendment freedoms within family and religious life; Fourteenth Amendment equal protection in family law; the constitutional dimension of domestic violence law and protective orders; and the intersection of federal constitutional rights with Wisconsin family law.\n\nWritten by a practitioner for practitioners - and for every citizen who believes that family autonomy is worth defending - \"The Constitutional Family\" is the most complete guide to constitutional family rights available. No other volume in constitutional literature combines this level of doctrinal depth with the practical orientation of an experienced federal court litigator.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465252425,"sku":"4mzwwp","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/95dvzn6-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970219"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-economy","title":"The Constitutional Economy","description":"The Constitution does not merely protect political rights, it protects economic liberty. The Founders understood that property rights and economic freedom are the material foundation of every other freedom a person possesses. When the government takes property without just compenttion, regulates a business out of existence, or retroactively destroys constitutional rights, it is not merely an economic decision, it is violating the Constitution. \n\n\"The Constitutional Economy:  The Complete Guide to Economic Rights, Regulatory Takings, and the Constitution\", is Volume VII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering comprehensive, practitioner grade coverage of every constitutional protection that bears on economic life in America. From the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause to the Contracts Clause, from substantive due process challenges to occupational licensing schemes to administrative law challenges to agency authority in the post \"Loper Bright\" landscape, this 450 page volume arms the constitutional warrior with every doctrine and every strategy needed to defend economic liberty in federal court. \n\nTopics covered include: physical and regulatory takings doctrine from \"Penn Central\" to \"Cedar Point Nursery\", substantive due process and economic liberty from \"Lochner's\" fall to its modern rehabilitation; procedural due process in administrative adjudications; Contracts Clause challenges to state legislation retroactively impairing private agreements; occupational licensing constitutional challenges; federal administrative law and the limits of agency authority after \"Loper Bright\", Wisconsin economic regulation and state constitutional protections; and the full landscape of constitutional litigation strategy for economic rights claims in the Seventh Circuit.\n\nFor Business owners, property owners, practitioners, and every citizen who believes that economic freedom is a constitutional right worth defending, \"The Constitutional Economy\" is the definitive practitioner's reference, rigorous, practical, and indispensable.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465317961,"sku":"2jdkkz","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/v875y8r-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970234"},{"product_id":"the-second-amendment-warrior","title":"The Second Amendment Warrior","description":"\"District of Columbia v. Heller\" held that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms. \"McDonald v. City of Chicago\" made that right enforceable against the states. \"New York State Rifle \u0026amp; Pistol Association v. Bruen\" transformed the constitutional analysis, requiring courts to evaluate firearms regulations against the historical tradition of firearms regulation at the founding. And \"United States v. Rahimi\" tested and confirmed the framework's limits. The doctrinal foundation for the most dynamic area of constitutional litigation in a generation is in place, and the constitutional warrior who commands it can win. \"The Second Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Firearms Constitutional Rights\" is Volume VIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, the flagship volume of the series and the most comprehensive Second Amendment practitioner's guide available. At 588 pages, this volume delivers doctrine, history, strategy, and advocacy tools across every dimension of Second Amendment practice: the \"HellerMcDonald-Bruen-Rahimi\" framework in complete detail; as-applied challenges to 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) felon-inpossession prohibition; historical tradition analysis from the English common law through the founding era through Reconstruction; Wisconsin firearms law and Seventh Circuit landscape; concealed and open carry rights; red flag law constitutional challenges; NFA compliance and constitutional limits; NICS background check disputes; firearms rights restoration; ATF regulatory authority after \"Loper Bright\"; Fourth Amendment issues in firearms cases; ACCA sentencing and § 922(g) charging decisions; post-conviction relief; and the full scope of pre-trial, trial, and appellate Second Amendment practice. This is the book that every constitutional warrior defending a client's firearms rights needs. Rigorous. Practical. Complete.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465547337,"sku":"vwjvv2","price":79.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/57dmzzz-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970246"},{"product_id":"the-fouth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Fouth Amendment Warrior","description":"The Fourth Amendment guarantees the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures — a guarantee that the founding generation understood as the constitutional barrier between the citizen and the general warrant, between the individual and a government empowered to search at will. Today that guarantee faces its greatest challenge in history: a government equipped with digital surveillance tools of unprecedented power, a third-party doctrine that threatens to swallow the privacy protection its replacement was designed to secure, and courts struggling to apply eighteenth-century text to twenty-first-century technology. \n\nThe Fourth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Search, Seizure, Digital Privacy, and the Fight Against Warrantless Government Surveillance is Volume IX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the search and seizure doctrine that every criminal defense lawyer, civil liberties litigator, and privacy advocate must command. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full Fourth Amendment landscape from Katz to Carpenter: the warrant requirement and every exception; the third-party doctrine and its post-Carpenter erosion; cell phone privacy after Riley; GPS and location data surveillance; the stingray device and cell site simulator Fourth Amendment issues; geofence warrants; DNA collection; biometric data; facial recognition; smart home devices; digital search warrants and cross-border data access; the suppression motion practice that turns Fourth Amendment doctrine into acquittals; and the civil litigation framework for challenging unconstitutional surveillance programs. \n\nFor every lawyer who believes the Fourth Amendment still means something in the digital age — and for every client who deserves to know their constitutional limits on what government can know — this is the essential guide.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465711177,"sku":"y26qqm","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/rm496n7-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970259"},{"product_id":"the-first-amendment-warrior","title":"The First Amendment Warrior","description":"The First Amendment is the constitutional guarantee that makes all others possible. When government silences political speech, it eliminates the mechanism through which citizens can resist all other violations. When it coerces religious practice, it attacks the deepest convictions of human identity. When it muzzles the press, it extinguishes the watchdog without which official misconduct thrives unchecked. And when it punishes mere dissent — the expression of views the powerful find uncomfortable — it betrays the fundamental promise of a free republic. \n\nThe First Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Free Speech, Religious Liberty, Press Freedom, and the Right to Dissent is Volume X of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the full First Amendment landscape for advocates who fight for freedom of speech, religion, and press. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista delivers complete doctrinal coverage of: free speech doctrine from Schenck to Brandenburg to United States v. Alvarez; the content-based\/content-neutral distinction and its critical role in scrutiny analysis; the public forum doctrine and its application to government property, digital platforms, and university campuses; true threats and incitement doctrine; commercial and compelled speech; the Establishment Clause from Lemon to Kennedy v. Bremerton; the Free Exercise Clause from Employment Division v. Smith through Fulton to 303 Creative; RFRA practice; the ministerial exception; the reporter's privilege under Branzburg and shield law supplements; and the intersection of the First Amendment with defamation, privacy, and anti-discrimination law. \n\nFor every lawyer who defends the freedoms that make a free society possible, this is the essential reference.","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55688465907785,"sku":"g78vm2","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/q68vgnm-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1778970272"},{"product_id":"the-sixth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Sixth Amendment Warrior","description":"The Sixth Amendment is the criminal defendant's constitutional shield — a cluster of rights designed to ensure that the awesome power of the state cannot crush an individual without giving them every protection the Constitution demands. The right to counsel, the right to a speedy and public trial, the right to an impartial jury, the right to confront witnesses, the right to compulsory process, and the right to be informed of the charges — each of these guarantees has been the subject of landmark litigation that the constitutional warrior must command completely. \n\nThe Sixth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to the Right to Counsel, Fair Trial, Confrontation, and the Constitution's Criminal Trial Guarantees is Volume XI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the full Sixth Amendment doctrine that every criminal defense lawyer must master. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the entire Sixth Amendment landscape: the right to counsel from arrest through appeal and the Strickland two-part test for ineffective assistance; the Crawford v. Washington revolution in confrontation doctrine and the testimonial hearsay analysis that replaced the reliability test; the Batson v. Kentucky challenge to discriminatory jury selection and its progeny; the Barker v. Wingo speedy trial balancing test and its application in federal and state courts; the compulsory process right to present a complete defense; and the fair trial guarantee's intersection with pretrial publicity, sequestration, and biased decision-makers. \n\nFor every criminal defense lawyer whose clients deserve the full protection the Constitution provides, this volume ensures you know every element of every right — and how to enforce it.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55689211936841,"sku":"7k85n7","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/nvr8mnq-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779048743"},{"product_id":"the-fifth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Fifth Amendment Warrior","description":"Five rights in a single amendment — and every one of them is under sustained assault. The Fifth Amendment guarantees that no person shall be compelled to incriminate themselves, be twice placed in jeopardy for the same offense, be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, or have private property taken for public use without just compensation. Each of these guarantees has generated an enormous body of case law that the constitutional warrior must command. \n\nThe Fifth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Self-Incrimination, Miranda, Due Process, Double Jeopardy, and the Takings Clause is Volume XII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering complete doctrinal coverage of all five Fifth Amendment provisions. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers: the scope of the privilege against self-incrimination in criminal proceedings, administrative investigations, and digital contexts; Miranda v. Arizona and the waiver, invocation, and public safety exception doctrines; the due process voluntariness standard for confessions; the Blockburger same-elements test for double jeopardy and its application to successive prosecutions; and the Takings Clause from physical takings to regulatory takings under Penn Central, Lucas, and Cedar Point Nursery — the complete framework for property rights claims. \n\nFor criminal defense lawyers, the Fifth Amendment is the primary shield against self-incrimination and prosecutorial overreach. For property rights advocates, the Takings Clause is the primary constitutional protection against regulatory destruction of economic value. This volume gives both the complete doctrinal framework they need. \n\nThe Fifth Amendment is not a technicality — it is the Constitution's guarantee that government must play by the rules. The Fifth Amendment Warrior ensures you know every rule.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55689268658249,"sku":"mv47g4","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/dyew47z-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779051791"},{"product_id":"the-fourteenth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Fourteenth Amendment Warrior","description":"The Fourteenth Amendment rewrote the Constitution. Ratified in 1868 after the bloodiest war in American history, it established national citizenship, incorporated the Bill of Rights against the states, guaranteed equal protection of the laws, prohibited deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process, and gave Congress power to enforce these guarantees through appropriate legislation. No provision of the Constitution has generated more consequential litigation — or more contested doctrine — in the century and a half since its ratification. \n\nThe Fourteenth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Equal Protection, Due Process, Civil Rights, and the Constitutional Guarantee of Equal Justice is Volume XIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the amendment that is simultaneously the foundation of civil rights law, the source of incorporated constitutional rights, and the most contested battleground in contemporary constitutional litigation. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete Fourteenth Amendment landscape: the Equal Protection Clause and its tiered scrutiny framework — strict scrutiny for race, national origin, and alienage; intermediate scrutiny for sex and illegitimacy; rational basis with and without bite for economic classifications; the animus doctrine from Romer through Windsor to Dobbs; and the discriminatory purpose requirement of Arlington Heights. He then covers substantive due process — the doctrine's controversial origins in Lochner, its mid-century development from Meyer and Pierce through Griswold and Lawrence, and the Glucksberg history-and-tradition test that now governs after Dobbs. Procedural due process receives complete treatment under the Mathews v. Eldridge framework. And Section 5 enforcement power — its scope and limits after City of Boerne and Kimel — closes the volume. \n\nFor every civil rights practitioner, every constitutional litigator, and every advocate for equal justice, this is the essential reference.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55690785652809,"sku":"68dqzp","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/jemg2ke-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779136960"},{"product_id":"the-eighth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Eighth Amendment Warrior","description":"Punishment that shocks the conscience of a civilized society is forbidden by the Constitution. The Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishments — descended verbatim from the English Bill of Rights of 1689 — stands as the Constitution's guarantee that the state's power to punish is not unlimited, that the severity of punishment must bear some proportionate relationship to the offense, and that human beings in government custody retain their fundamental dignity regardless of what they have done. \n\nThe Eighth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Cruel and Unusual Punishment, Excessive Bail, Proportional Sentencing, and the Constitutional Limits of Punishment is Volume XIV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the Eighth Amendment across every context where it applies. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete Eighth Amendment landscape: the death penalty constitutional framework from Furman v. Georgia's moratorium to Gregg v. Georgia's modern structure, including method-of-execution challenges under Baze v. Rees and Glossip v. Gross; the intellectual disability protection from Atkins v. Virginia through Hall v. Florida to Moore v. Texas; mental illness and the execution bar of Ford v. Wainwright and Panetti v. Quarterman; the juvenile sentencing revolution from Roper v. Simmons through Graham, Miller, Montgomery, and Jones v. Mississippi; non-capital proportionality doctrine under Solem v. Helm, Harmelin, and Ewing v. California; conditions of confinement and deliberate indifference under Estelle v. Gamble, Farmer v. Brennan, and Brown v. Plata; and the excessive fines clause after Timbs v. Indiana. \n\nFor every lawyer who fights for the constitutional limits on punishment — and for every person who believes that the Constitution's prohibition on barbarism must be enforced — this is the essential guide. ","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55692894470217,"sku":"qyg29k","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/jemgp69-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779232190"},{"product_id":"the-thirteenth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Thirteenth Amendment Warrior","description":"The Thirteenth Amendment abolished slavery — and it did far more than that. Section 2 of the Thirteenth Amendment gives Congress the power to enforce the abolition through appropriate legislation, a power the Supreme Court has held extends to eliminating every badge and incident of slavery wherever it appears in American law and life. This is not a limited power. It is a broad structural mandate to complete the work of freedom — and it has been dramatically underused. \n\nThe Thirteenth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Abolition, the Badges and Incidents of Slavery, Involuntary Servitude, and the Constitutional Roots of Civil Rights is Volume XV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering the complete analysis of the most powerful but least understood provision in the Constitution. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista traces the Thirteenth Amendment's complete history: its passage during the Civil War, the Civil Rights Acts of 1866 and 1870 that implemented it, The Civil Rights Cases' betrayal of the badges and incidents doctrine, Bailey v. Alabama's application to peonage, Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer Co.'s revival of broad Section 2 enforcement power, Runyon v. McCrary's extension to private discrimination, and the modernreach of the Thirteenth Amendment into trafficking, modern servitude, and private discrimination. He also covers the academic revival of broad Thirteenth Amendment theory and its potential application in contemporary civil rights litigation. \n\nFor civil rights practitioners who need independent enforcement authority that does not depend on the Fourteenth Amendment's state action requirement, the Thirteenth Amendment is the key. This volume teaches you to use it fully.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55694104854601,"sku":"2jdv6e","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/65dprd8-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779313009"},{"product_id":"the-fifteenth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Fifteenth Amendment Warrior","description":"The Fifteenth Amendment guarantees that the right to vote shall not be denied or abridged on account of race, color, or previous condition of servitude. From the day of its ratification in 1870 to the present, this guarantee has been resisted, circumvented, judicially narrowed, and politically attacked in ways that have kept millions of Americans from exercising the most fundamental right of democratic citizenship. The constitutional warrior who fights for voting rights must know both the promise of the Fifteenth Amendment and the obstacles the law has erected against it. \n\nThe Fifteenth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Voting Rights, Racial Disenfranchisement, Electoral Justice, and the Constitutional Guarantee of Equal Suffrage is Volume XVI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to voting rights doctrine in the post-Shelby County landscape. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full voting rights landscape: the history of disenfranchisement from the Grandfather Clause through the white primary to modern suppression techniques; the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and its Section 2 and Section 5 framework; Shelby County v. Holder's elimination of preclearance and the fight to restore it; Brnovich v. DNC's restriction of Section 2; Allen v. Milligan's revival of racial gerrymandering claims; photo ID requirements and the Crawford balancing framework; voter roll purges; polling place restrictions; felon disenfranchisement; and the complete arsenal of constitutional and statutory tools for contemporary voting rights litigation. \n\nFor every election lawyer, civil rights practitioner, and advocate for democratic equality, this is the essential guide to the right without which no other right can be secured.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55694145126473,"sku":"4mzpv5","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/w42mqzm-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779317218"},{"product_id":"the-separation-of-powers-warrior","title":"The Separation of Powers Warrior","description":"The Founders divided power among three branches for a purpose: to prevent any single person, institution, or faction from concentrating enough governmental authority to destroy the liberty of the governed. The separation of powers doctrine is not a technical abstraction — it is the structural constitutional guarantee that lies beneath every individual right in the Bill of Rights. When executive power expands beyond its constitutional limits, every other constitutional protection is at risk. \n\nThe Separation of Powers Warrior: The Complete Guide to Executive Power, Congressional Authority, the Administrative State, and the Constitutional Framework of American Government is Volume XVII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the structural constitutional doctrine that has never been more relevant or more contested than it is today. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full separation of powers landscape: Justice Jackson's Youngstown three-category framework and its application to contemporary executive action; the unitary executive theory and its implications for independent agencies after Seila Law LLC v. CFPB and Collins v. Yellen; the removal power from Humphrey's Executor through Morrison v. Olson to the current doctrine; the Appointments Clause and the Lucia v. SEC and United States v. Arthrex decisions; the nondelegation doctrine's potential revival after Gundy v. United States and Justice Gorsuch's dissent; the legislative veto's unconstitutionality after INS v. Chadha; executive privilege after United States v. Nixon and Trump v. Mazars; signing statements; and the treaty power. \n\nFor every lawyer who challenges executive overreach, litigates against administrative agencies, or advises clients whose interests are at stake in the war between the branches, this is the essential guide.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55696480337993,"sku":"g78ewx","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/gj4799v-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779380638"},{"product_id":"the-eleventh-amendment-warrior","title":"The Eleventh Amendment Warrior","description":"The Eleventh Amendment bars federal courts from hearing most suits against state governments — but the bars are not absolute, and the constitutional warrior who knows the doctrine completely can reach the courthouse on behalf of clients that sovereign immunity would otherwise leave without a federal remedy. \n\nThe Eleventh Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to State Sovereign Immunity, the Ex Parte Young Doctrine, Section 5 Abrogation, and Suing State Government in Federal Court is Volume XVIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to sovereign immunity law, the doctrines that limit it, and the strategies for working around it when it cannot be overcome directly. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete sovereign immunity landscape: the Eleventh Amendment's text and its Hans v. Louisiana expansion to suits by in-state citizens; the Alden v. Maine extension of immunity to state court suits; Ex parte Young and the officer suit doctrine that enables prospective injunctive and declaratory relief against state officials violating federal law; congressional abrogation under Section 5 of the Fourteenth Amendment — when it works (Nevada v. Hibbs, Tennessee v. Lane) and when it fails (Kimel, Garrett); voluntary waiver and consent doctrines; the Federal Tort Claims Act framework for suing the federal government including the discretionary function exception; and state officer personal liability under Hafer v. Melo and related cases. \n\nFor civil rights practitioners, disability rights lawyers, employment discrimination attorneys, and anyone who needs to hold state government accountable in federal court, this volume provides the complete roadmap around every immunity barrier.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55696874176585,"sku":"xx2ejx","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/nvr4nkj-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779394052"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-habeas-corpus-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Habeas Corpus Warrior","description":"Habeas corpus is the constitutional guarantee that a person cannot be held without lawful justification — the Great Writ that courts have enforced for centuries to protect the wrongfully imprisoned from the unchecked power of the state. In the modern federal system, habeas corpus practice is governed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 — a statute that imposed stringent procedural requirements and demanding standards of review designed to limit federal habeas relief for state prisoners. Navigating AEDPA effectively requires mastery of the statute's technical requirements and the Supreme Court's extensive interpretation of them. \n\nThe Constitutional Habeas Corpus Warrior: The Complete Guide to the Great Writ, Federal Habeas Corpus Under AEDPA, Sections 2254 and 2255, Successive Petitions, and the Constitutional Warrior's Last Line of Defense is Volume XIX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to federal habeas corpus practice. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full habeas landscape: AEDPA's standards of review under Section 2254(d)(1) — the \"contrary to\" and \"unreasonable application\" tests and how courts apply them; the unreasonable determination of fact standard under Section 2254(d)(2); the exhaustion requirement and how to satisfy it without procedurally defaulting preserved claims; cause and prejudice exceptions to procedural default; the Schlup actual innocence gateway; Teague v. Lane retroactivity analysis and the application of new constitutional rules on collateral review; successive petition gatekeeping under Section 2244(b); Section 2255 practice for federal prisoners; and the unique demands of capital habeas — including competency for execution under Ford and Panetti. \n\nFor every post-conviction lawyer whose client's freedom or life depends on the federal courts, this volume is the essential guide.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55697070063689,"sku":"pmy2k9","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/95dpvyr-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779399095"},{"product_id":"the-seventh-amendment-warrior","title":"The Seventh Amendment Warrior","description":"The Seventh Amendment guarantees the right of trial by jury in suits at common law. For two centuries, this guarantee has protected the right of ordinary citizens to have their disputes decided by a jury of their peers rather than by government-appointed adjudicators. Today that guarantee is under systematic assault from mandatory arbitration clauses that strip consumers of jury rights, from administrative agencies that adjudicate regulatory violations without juries, and from bankruptcy and regulatory systems that Congress has assigned to non-Article III tribunals. \n\nThe Seventh Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to the Civil Jury Trial Right, the Legal-Equitable Distinction, the Public Rights Doctrine, and the Constitutional Limits of Administrative Adjudication is Volume XX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the civil jury trial right and its constitutional limits on government adjudication schemes. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full Seventh Amendment landscape: the historical test that determines which suits at common law carry a constitutional jury trial right; the equitable\/legal distinction and its application to hybrid claims; the public rights doctrine from Atlas Roofing through Granfinanciera to SEC v. Jarkesy; the Seventh Amendment's application to bankruptcy court adjudication after Stern v. Marshall; the constitutional validity of mandatory arbitration clauses under CompuCredit and AT\u0026amp;T Mobility; and the practical tools for asserting jury trial rights in regulatory, bankruptcy, and administrative proceedings. \n\nSEC v. Jarkesy confirmed that the Seventh Amendment applies to civil penalty proceedings where analogous claims were tried at common law — opening a new front in the constitutional challenge to administrative adjudication that every constitutional warrior litigating against agencies needs to understand.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55698927583305,"sku":"wx2px9","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/95dp4vm-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779471491"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-federal-courts-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Federal Courts Warrior","description":"Before any constitutional claim can be heard on the merits, it must survive the threshold. Federal courts apply a demanding set of justiciability doctrines — standing, ripeness, mootness, and the political question doctrine — that determine whether a case is the right kind of dispute, brought by the right kind of party, at the right time, presenting a question courts can decide. Losing on any one of these thresholds ends the case regardless of how compelling the constitutional argument is on the merits.\n\nThe Constitutional Federal Courts Warrior: The Complete Guide to Article III Standing, Ripeness, Mootness, the Political Question Doctrine, Federal Jurisdiction, and the Threshold Doctrines of Constitutional Litigation is Volume XXI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to the threshold doctrines that every federal court constitutional litigator must command. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full threshold doctrine landscape: the Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife three-part standing test — injury in fact, causation, and redressability — and how to satisfy each element at the pleading and summary judgment stages; the Spokeo and TransUnion concrete injury requirements for statutory and digital rights cases; organizational and associational standing; taxpayer standing; third-party standing; the Abbott Laboratories ripeness test; the mootness doctrine and its exceptions including voluntary cessation and capable of repetition; the political question doctrine from Baker v. Carr through Rucho v. Common Cause; and the zone of interests test for statutory standing. \n\nFor every constitutional litigator, mastering these threshold doctrines is not optional — it is the prerequisite to getting to the constitutional argument that can actually change the law.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55699061571657,"sku":"wx2pw9","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/v87zpn5-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779475722"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-remedies-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Remedies Warrior","description":"Constitutional rights without effective remedies are promises the government never has to keep. When a police officer violates the Fourth Amendment, when a prison official acts with deliberate indifference, when a municipality runs an unconstitutional policy that harms its residents — the Constitution demands accountability. Making that accountability real requires mastery of civil rights remedies law that goes beyond knowing the constitutional violation and extends to every dimension of damages, injunctive relief, immunity doctrine, and fee recovery. \n\nThe Constitutional Remedies Warrior: The Complete Guide to Section 1983 Damages, Qualified Immunity, Monell Municipal Liability, Injunctive Relief, and the Art of Winning and Collecting in Constitutional Cases is Volume XXII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to civil rights remedies. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete civil rights remedies landscape: Section 1983's elements and the color-of-law requirement; compensatory damages for constitutional violations including emotional distress and loss of constitutional rights; punitive damages against officials who act with malice or reckless indifference; nominal damages after Uzuegbunam; the qualified immunity doctrine from Harlow v. Fitzgerald through the clearly established law standard and its circuit-by-circuit development; Monell municipal liability for official policies, customs, failure to train, and ratification; absolute immunity for judges, prosecutors, and legislators; the eBay standard for permanent injunctive relief; the Hensley lodestar framework for Section 1988 attorney's fee awards; and the practical strategy for making the remedies case alongside the constitutional case. \n\nFor every civil rights practitioner whose clients deserve real accountability — not just a legal ruling but actual vindication — this is the essential reference.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55700166901833,"sku":"9dnkvn","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/p6nvrdn-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779560065"},{"product_id":"the-ninth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Ninth Amendment Warrior","description":"The Ninth Amendment declares that the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. Those unenumerated rights — the right to privacy, the right to make intimate decisions free from government coercion, the right to family autonomy — have been recognized and protected through the substantive due process doctrine of the Fourteenth Amendment. And they are now under the most sustained attack in a generation. \n\nThe Ninth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Unenumerated Constitutional Rights, Substantive Due Process, the History-and-Tradition Test, and Constitutional Privacy After Dobbs is Volume XXIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete guide to unenumerated rights doctrine in the post-Dobbs constitutional landscape. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista traces the full history of substantive due process — from the natural law foundations of the early republic through Meyer v. Nebraska, Pierce v. Society of Sisters, Griswold v. Connecticut, Roe v. Wade, Lawrence v. Texas, and Obergefell v. Hodges — and then addresses the Dobbs demolition and what it leaves standing. He covers the Glucksberg history-and-tradition test in complete detail: what counts as a deeply rooted historical tradition, how to construct the historical record that satisfies the test, which rights have already survived it, and which new liberty claims might be pressed using the historical methodology that Dobbs requires.\n\nFor practitioners who represent clients whose fundamental liberty interests — in family, health, intimate association, and personal autonomy — are threatened by government action in the post-Dobbs era, this volume provides the complete doctrinal roadmap.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55700213563465,"sku":"8mk858","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/gj4wvkv-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779563985"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-technology-warrior-early-edition","title":"The Constitutional Technology Warrior (Early Edition)","description":"Technology moves faster than courts. The government's digital surveillance capabilities — the ability to track location through cell towers, access communications through cloud service providers, map associations through metadata, and reconstruct entire lives through digital records — have outpaced the constitutional doctrine designed to restrain them. The constitutional warrior must understand both the doctrinal tools the Supreme Court has already provided and the emerging arguments that will define the next generation of digital rights law. \n\nThe Constitutional Technology Warrior: The Complete Guide to Digital Rights, the Fourth Amendment, and the Constitutional Framework for Emerging Technology is Volume XXIV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the foundational guide to the Fourth Amendment and First Amendment dimensions of digital rights practice. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the digital constitutional law landscape as it stood when this early edition was written: Riley v. California's protection of cell phone data, Carpenter v. United States's limitation of the third-party doctrine for cell site location records, the digital warrant framework for searching electronic devices, the First Amendment constraints on government regulation of online speech, and the constitutional dimensions of government surveillance programs including PRISM, stingray devices, and national security letter programs. \n\nFor practitioners who need the historical doctrinal context for the dramatic developments in digital constitutional law since Carpenter, and for those working on digital rights cases where this early doctrinal foundation directly governs, this volume provides the essential framework. Volume XLV of the series updates and expands the technology analysis comprehensively for the current landscape.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55700250656841,"sku":"y26pn4","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/45dkn2n-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779567645"},{"product_id":"the-tenth-amendment-warrior","title":"The Tenth Amendment Warrior","description":"The federal government has only those powers the Constitution expressly grants it. The Tenth Amendment makes this explicit: powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people. This is not merely a truism — it is an enforceable constitutional command, and the constitutional warrior who commands the doctrine for enforcing it possesses one of the most powerful tools in the constitutional arsenal. \n\nThe Tenth Amendment Warrior: The Complete Guide to Reserved Powers, the Anti-Commandeering Doctrine, Federal Mandates, State Sovereignty, and the Constitutional Limits of Federal Power Over the States is Volume XXV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to federalism doctrine and its application to federal overreach. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full Tenth Amendment and federalism landscape: the anti-commandeering doctrine from New York v. United States through Printz v. United States to Murphy v. NCAA — the principle that the federal government cannot conscript state officers or state legislatures to implement federal policy; the Commerce Clause limits established in United States v. Lopez and United States v. Morrison that require actual economic activity as the basis for federal power; the Spending Clause coercion doctrine of NFIB v. Sebelius that prevents federal funding conditions from effectively compelling state policy adoption; the anti-commandeering doctrine's application to sanctuary cities and state refusal to implement federal immigration enforcement; and the full Wisconsin and Seventh Circuit federalism landscape. \n\nFor state and local government lawyers, constitutional litigators challenging federal mandates, and advocates for the constitutional principle that the federal government must stay in its lane, this is the essential practitioner's guide.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55700281491529,"sku":"n4yp7k","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/jempny5-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779572578"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-equal-protection-advanced-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Equal Protection Advanced Warrior","description":"The Equal Protection Clause guarantees that government will treat people as individuals, not as members of preferred or disfavored groups. It is the constitutional command that race, sex, national origin, and other protected characteristics shall not determine what law applies to a person. In an era of intense political and legal conflict over affirmative action, sex-based distinctions, LGBTQ rights, and racial justice, mastery of the complete equal protection doctrine is more important than ever. \n\nThe Constitutional Equal Protection Advanced Warrior: The Complete Guide to Race After SFFA, Sex and Intermediate Scrutiny, Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity, the Animus Doctrine, and the Full Framework of Equal Protection Litigation is Volume XXVI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the advanced practitioner's guide to the full equal protection doctrine. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete equal protection landscape at advanced depth: the post-SFFA landscape for race-conscious programs — what survives, what was eliminated, and what race-neutral alternatives are now legally required; sex discrimination and the exceedingly persuasive justification standard of United States v. Virginia; sexual orientation and gender identity under the Romer-Windsor-Obergefell animus doctrine; the discriminatory intent requirement of Washington v. Davis and Arlington Heights for facially neutral laws with discriminatory effects; the equal protection dimensions of felon disenfranchisement, voter ID, and immigration enforcement; and the Fifth Amendment equal protection principles that apply to federal action after Bolling v. Sharpe. \n\nAt 558 pages, this is the most comprehensive equal protection practitioner's guide in the Constitutional Law Series — built for the advocates who fight discrimination in every form.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55701066252361,"sku":"9dnk29","price":79.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/rm4pz7p-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779643382"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-administrative-law-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Administrative Law Warrior","description":"The administrative state faces its most sustained constitutional challenge in history. Chevron U.S.A. v. NRDC required courts to defer to agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes for forty years — until Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo overruled it in 2024. Courts must now exercise independent judgment in interpreting the statutes they administer. This single change restructures every federal regulatory proceeding and opens the door to statutory interpretation challenges that were foreclosed under Chevron's mandatory deference. \n\nThe Constitutional Administrative Law Warrior is Volume XXVII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering the complete practitioner's guide to the post-Chevron regulatory landscape. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete administrative law constitutional revolution: Loper Bright's overruling of Chevron and what the new de novo statutory interpretation framework means in practice; the major questions doctrine from King v. Burwell through West Virginia v. EPA to Biden v. Nebraska — the constitutional command that Congress speak clearly before authorizing agency action of vast economic and political significance; the nondelegation doctrine and its potential revival after Justice Gorsuch's Gundy v. United States dissent; the removal power doctrine from Humphrey's Executor through Seila Law LLC v. CFPB and Collins v. Yellen — with implications for every independent agency in the federal government; SEC v. Jarkesy's restoration of the Seventh Amendment jury trial right in civil penalty proceedings; and the APA's arbitrary and capricious standard and how Loper Bright affects its application. \n\nFor every lawyer who challenges federal agency action in health care, energy, environmental, financial, or technology regulation, the constitutional tools have never been more powerful. This volume teaches you to use all of them.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55701092827209,"sku":"vwjpvq","price":79.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/45dk97p-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779646285"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-religious-liberty-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Religious Liberty Warrior","description":"Religious liberty doctrine is being rebuilt from the ground up. The Lemon test is gone. Fulton v. City of Philadelphia exposed how the general applicability rule can be satisfied or avoided depending on the presence of discretionary exemption mechanisms. Kennedy v. Bremerton School District replaced Lemon with a historical practice analysis that dramatically reconfigures Establishment Clause doctrine. And 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis confirmed that the government cannot compel expressive business owners to create speech that violates their religious beliefs. \n\nThe Constitutional Religious Liberty Warrior is Volume XXVIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series, delivering the complete practitioner's guide to religious liberty law. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete landscape: Free Exercise doctrine from Employment Division v. Smith and City of Lukumi through Fulton v. City of Philadelphia — including the general applicability doctrine, discretionary exemption mechanisms, and the compelling interest test that kicks in when laws fail neutrality; the Establishment Clause after Kennedy — the historical practice test and how to use it; RFRA — the substantial burden standard, the compelling interest test, and the least restrictive means requirement; the ministerial exception from Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC through Our Lady of Guadalupe School v. Morrissey-Berru and what it protects; equal access to public funding under Trinity Lutheran, Espinoza v. Montana, and Carson v. Makin; RLUIPA's land use and institutionalized persons provisions; and the 303 Creative-Masterpiece Cakeshop intersection of religious liberty and anti-discrimination law. \n\nFor every religious liberty practitioner, this is the complete guide to the most transformative era in First Amendment religion clause history.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55701106065481,"sku":"zgqpm8","price":79.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/q68pdz7-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779649113"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-immigration-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Immigration Warrior","description":"The plenary power doctrine holds that Congress's authority over immigration is plenary, largely unreviewable, and beyond the normal constraints of constitutional law. But the doctrine has never been absolute, and the constitutional warrior who understands its limits — who knows where the Fifth Amendment's due process guarantee applies, where equal protection constrains immigration classifications, where the Fourth Amendment governs immigration enforcement, and where habeas corpus remains available despite statutory restrictions — is prepared to fight for clients in a system that regularly exceeds its constitutional authority. \n\nThe Constitutional Immigration Warrior is Volume XXIX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete practitioner's guide to constitutional immigration law. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional immigration landscape: the plenary power doctrine from Chae Chan Ping v. United States through its modern applications and growing constitutional constraints; procedural due process in removal proceedings; equal protection — Plyler v. Doe's protection for undocumented children's education, alienage classifications, and the DACA challenge; civil detention — Zadvydas v. Davis, Jennings v. Rodriguez, and the circuit split on prolonged detention; immigration enforcement Fourth Amendment — Martinez-Fuerte checkpoints, warrant requirements for workplace raids, and digital device searches at the border; and habeas corpus as the constitutional backstop when statutory review is unavailable.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55701318238281,"sku":"dm7228","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/zmepydw-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779660917"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-criminal-procedure-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Criminal Procedure Warrior","description":"Every criminal case is a constitutional case. The suppression motion that excludes the key evidence, the Miranda violation that suppresses the confession, the Brady motion that surfaces the exculpatory evidence the government concealed, the confrontation objection that keeps the testimonial hearsay out — these are constitutional victories that determine whether a person goes home or goes to prison. \n\nThe Constitutional Criminal Procedure Warrior is Volume XXX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series — the complete integrated practitioner's guide to constitutional criminal defense. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete criminal procedure constitutional landscape: Fourth Amendment suppression — Katz, Terry, Gant, Riley v. California, and the good faith exception; Miranda v. Arizona — the custody analysis, waiver standard of Berghuis v. Thompkins, and Missouri v. Seibert's question-first doctrine; the Sixth Amendment right to counsel — Massiah attachment, Strickland ineffective assistance, Padilla v. Kentucky, and Lafler-Frye plea bargaining; Brady v. Maryland and Giglio v. United States — materiality, Connick v. Thompson, and discovery practice; the Confrontation Clause from Crawford through Melendez-Diaz and Bullcoming; double jeopardy and the Blockburger same-offense test; and constitutional sentencing under Apprendi, Blakely, and Booker.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55701320302665,"sku":"qygppq","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/84d25ep-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779662681"},{"product_id":"the-first-amendment-advanced-warrior","title":"The First Amendment Advanced Warrior","description":"The First Amendment's protection for freedom of speech and press is the most litigated constitutional provision in American law — and the most doctrinally complex. The campaign finance system that Citizens United reshaped, the government employee who faces retaliation for speaking out, the student whose off-campus social media post leads to discipline, the creative professional compelled to design a wedding website — all require distinct First Amendment doctrines that the advanced constitutional warrior must command with precision. \n\nThe First Amendment Advanced Warrior is Volume XXXI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete advanced First Amendment landscape: campaign finance — Buckley, Citizens United, McCutcheon, and disclosure after Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta; government employee speech — Pickering, Connick, Garcetti, and the post-Garcetti circuit split; student speech — Tinker, Fraser, Hazelwood, and Mahanoy's off-campus digital speech extension; compelled speech — Wooley, Barnette, Hurley, NIFLA, and 303 Creative; public forum doctrine in complete depth; prior restraints and the Pentagon Papers standard; and content versus viewpoint discrimination across all its applications.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702135963721,"sku":"4mze77","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/yvrpgv2-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779721137"},{"product_id":"the-second-founding-warrior","title":"The Second Founding Warrior","description":"The Constitution was born twice. The first founding created the federal republic. The second founding — the Reconstruction Amendments ratified in the aftermath of the Civil War — transformed that republic by prohibiting slavery, guaranteeing equal protection and due process, and establishing federal power to enforce civil rights against the states. Understanding this second founding — what the Reconstruction Amendments meant to those who wrote and ratified them, how they were betrayed by the post-Reconstruction Supreme Court, and how they eventually became the constitutional foundation of the civil rights movement — is essential to any complete understanding of American constitutional law. \n\nThe Second Founding Warrior is Volume XXXII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete Reconstruction constitutional landscape: the Thirteenth Amendment's abolition and its Section 2 enforcement power; the Fourteenth Amendment's original meaning from the 39th Congress debates through the Civil Rights Act of 1866; the Fourteenth Amendment's privileges or immunities, due process, and equal protection clauses as originally understood; the Civil Rights Act of 1875 and its invalidation in The Civil Rights Cases; Plessy v. Ferguson and the collapse of Reconstruction's promise; the long road to Brown v. Board of Education; the Fifteenth Amendment's voting rights guarantee and its systematic evasion; and the original meaning arguments that the constitutional warrior deploys in civil rights litigation today.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702150512713,"sku":"68dk2x","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/dyevpmw-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779723035"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-property-rights-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Property Rights Warrior","description":"The Fifth Amendment's guarantee that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation is one of the most litigated constitutional provisions in property and land use law — and the doctrinal landscape is complex, contested, and rapidly evolving. From the per se rules for physical invasions and total regulatory deprivations to the multi-factor balancing of Penn Central and the exactions doctrine of Nollan, Dolan, and Koontz, the property rights practitioner must command a sophisticated doctrinal arsenal. \n\nThe Constitutional Property Rights Warrior is Volume XXXIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full property rights constitutional landscape: the public use requirement from Kelo v. City of New London; physical per se takings from Loretto through Cedar Point Nursery's access regulation holding; regulatory takings — Penn Central's three-factor test and Lucas's categorical rule; the exactions doctrine — Nollan's essential nexus, Dolan's rough proportionality, and Koontz's extension to permit denials; Knick v. Township of Scott's overruling of Williamson County and opening of federal courts; temporal takings; and just compensation calculation in Wisconsin.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702587146313,"sku":"2jdqnj","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/yvrprwd-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779739610"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-procedural-due-process-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Procedural Due Process Warrior","description":"The government cannot deprive a person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law — and the procedural dimension of that guarantee requires meaningful notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard before the deprivation occurs. The Mathews v. Eldridge balancing test determines what process the Constitution demands in every context from welfare terminations to professional license revocations. \n\nThe Constitutional Procedural Due Process Warrior is Volume XXXIV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full procedural due process landscape: identifying protected interests — property interests after Roth and Sindermann's entitlement framework, and liberty interests from Meachum through Sandin's atypical hardship standard; the Mathews v. Eldridge three-factor test applied to welfare benefits, disability benefits, public employment, student discipline, professional licensing, and immigration removal; pre-deprivation versus post-deprivation remedies and the Parratt-Hudson doctrine; procedural due process in the administrative agency context; and the intersection of procedural due process with the APA's formal adjudication requirements.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702605693001,"sku":"68dkg4","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/q68pqy7-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779741529"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-election-law-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Election Law Warrior","description":"Elections are the mechanism through which the people exercise their constitutional sovereignty — and the constitutional framework governing them has never been more contested. The independent state legislature theory, the Purcell Principle, the partisan gerrymandering non-justiciability of Rucho, and Bush v. Gore's equal protection principles all define the constitutional landscape in which election law litigation occurs. \n\nThe Constitutional Election Law Warrior is Volume XXXV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional election law landscape: the right to vote — Reynolds v. Sims, Harper v. Virginia, and the constitutional basis of voter equality; ballot access — the Anderson-Burdick balancing test, voter ID, early voting, and absentee ballot restrictions; racial gerrymandering — Shaw v. Reno, the Gingles framework, and Allen v. Milligan; partisan gerrymandering — Rucho's federal non-justiciability and the role of state courts; the independent state legislature theory — Moore v. Harper; the Purcell Principle; Bush v. Gore's equal protection holding; and election administration constitutional dimensions including signature verification and ballot counting procedures.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702619291721,"sku":"7k8n2e","price":79.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/rm4pkee-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779743041"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-second-amendment-advanced-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Second Amendment Advanced Warrior","description":"New York State Rifle \u0026amp; Pistol Association v. Bruen rewrote Second Amendment doctrine. The two-step approach applied after Heller and McDonald is gone, replaced by a purely historical test: the government must demonstrate that a challenged firearms regulation is consistent with the historical tradition of firearms regulation in America at the founding or at the time of the Fourteenth Amendment's ratification. \n\nThe Constitutional Second Amendment Advanced Warrior is Volume XXXVI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the complete post-Bruen landscape: the Bruen historical methodology — researching the historical tradition, which periods are relevant, identifying analogues, and the relevance of post-ratification history; United States v. Rahimi's application to domestic violence prohibitions using surety and going-armed historical analogues; assault weapons regulations and the circuit split; red flag laws and the historical tradition of surety bonds; background check requirements; the right to carry outside the home; and felon dispossession statutes under Rahimi's dangerousness framework.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702646292553,"sku":"dm7vzw","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/e7n9q5r-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779744949"},{"product_id":"the-constitution-military-and-national-security-warrior","title":"The Constitution Military and National Security Warrior","description":"The government's power is at its peak in matters of national security — and the Constitution's protections are most severely tested there. The constitutional warrior who challenges national security overreach must command the specialized doctrine that governs this contested terrain, from the Youngstown Steel framework to FISA procedures to the habeas rights that survived Guantanamo. \n\nThe Constitutional Military and National Security Warrior is Volume XXXVII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full national security constitutional landscape: war powers — the War Powers Resolution, its constitutionality, and the President's claimed authority to use military force; enemy combatant rights — Hamdi, Rasul v. Bush, and Boumediene's constitutional habeas right; military commissions — Hamdan's invalidation and the Military Commissions Acts; FISA courts and the constitutional adequacy of their procedures; national security letters and First Amendment dimensions; the state secrets privilege from Reynolds through Mohamed v. Jeppesen; and the Youngstown Steel framework for evaluating presidential national security claims.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55702668935241,"sku":"qygwzd","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/kv7pg54-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779747705"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-environmental-law-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Environmental Law Warrior","description":"Federal environmental law rests on constitutional foundations that are simultaneously expansive and vulnerable. The Commerce Clause power that supports Clean Water Act jurisdiction is the same Commerce Clause that Sackett v. EPA has recently constrained. The major questions doctrine requires clear congressional authorization for major regulatory decisions. The Takings Clause limits regulations that deprive property owners of economic value. And the standing doctrine regularly trips up environmental plaintiffs. \n\nThe Constitutional Environmental Law Warrior is Volume XXXVIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional environmental landscape: Commerce Clause basis for federal environmental statutes — SWANCC, Rapanos, and Sackett's narrowing; the major questions doctrine — West Virginia v. EPA's invalidation of the Clean Power Plan and implications for EPA authority; regulatory takings in environmental regulation — Lucas, Penn Central, and Murr; environmental standing from Lujan through Massachusetts v. EPA's special solicitude; the non-delegation doctrine's implications for broad environmental regulatory grants; and constitutional environmental rights under state constitutions and emerging federal theories.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55703819976777,"sku":"dm7v25","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/kv7pg6d-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779825690"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-labor-and-employment-advanced-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Labor and Employment Advanced Warrior","description":"When the government is your employer, the Constitution is your employment contract. Public employees enjoy First Amendment protections against retaliation for protected speech, procedural due process rights before termination, and protection against compelled financial support for union political speech confirmed by Janus v. AFSCME. \n\nThe Constitutional Labor and Employment Advanced Warrior is Volume XXXIX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full public employment constitutional landscape: First Amendment speech — the Pickering balancing test, Connick's public concern requirement, Garcetti's exclusion of speech made pursuant to official duties, and the post-Garcetti academic freedom exception; Janus v. AFSCME — the overruling of Abood, the impact on public sector union financing, and the First Amendment theory; patronage employment — Elrod, Branti, and Rutan's extension to hiring and promotion; procedural due process — Loudermill and the property interest in continued employment; Fourth Amendment in the government workplace — O'Connor v. Ortega and drug testing under Skinner and Von Raab; and equal protection in public employment under Feeney's discriminatory purpose requirement.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55703826399305,"sku":"7k8nn2","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/84d2mmp-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779827511"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-juvenile-law-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Juvenile Law Warrior","description":"Children are constitutionally different. The Supreme Court has held repeatedly that the distinctive attributes of youth — their immaturity, impetuosity, and capacity for change — require different constitutional treatment. From In re Gault's due process rights to Miller v. Alabama's ban on mandatory life-without-parole for juvenile homicide offenders, the constitutional framework governing youth demands specialized advocacy. \n\nThe Constitutional Juvenile Law Warrior is Volume XL of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full juvenile constitutional landscape: In re Gault and the due process rights in delinquency proceedings — notice, counsel, confrontation, and privilege against self-incrimination; the Eighth Amendment and juvenile punishment — Roper v. Simmons, Graham v. Florida, Miller v. Alabama, and Montgomery v. Louisiana's retroactivity; juvenile transfer to adult court constitutional dimensions; the Fourth Amendment in schools — T.L.O., Safford v. Redding's strip search, and random drug testing; the Fifth Amendment in school interrogations; and Miranda in the juvenile context after J.D.B. v. North Carolina's youth-based custody analysis.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55703844552777,"sku":"4mzeey","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/45dk4gk-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779829378"},{"product_id":"the-constitution-free-press-warrior","title":"The Constitution Free Press Warrior","description":"A free press is the constitutional guardian of self-government — the institution the First Amendment elevates precisely because the press performs a structural function in maintaining governmental accountability to the people. The reporter shielding a source, the newspaper publishing classified documents, the journalist seeking access to immigration hearings — all exercise First Amendment rights the constitutional warrior must understand and defend completely. \n\nThe Constitutional Free Press Warrior is Volume XLI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full free press constitutional landscape: the reporter's privilege — Branzburg's rejection of an absolute privilege, the federal common law privilege, the balancing test most circuits apply, and state shield laws; prior restraints — Near v. Minnesota, the Pentagon Papers standard, and injunctions against publication; the First Amendment right of access — Richmond Newspapers, Globe Newspaper, and the Press-Enterprise test; newsgathering rights — government secrecy classifications, the Espionage Act applied to journalists, and the Shield Act debate; journalist subpoenas and source protection practice; and the digital press — the First Amendment status of bloggers and online journalists.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55703850287177,"sku":"vwj22k","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/2md6nkv-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779831280"},{"product_id":"the-constitution-municipal-law-warrior","title":"The Constitution Municipal Law Warrior","description":"Local government is the level of government closest to the people — and the constitutional framework governing it is correspondingly complex. Municipal authority is constrained by state law frameworks, municipal liability is governed by Monell's policy or custom requirement, and the constitutional rights of those who interact with local government are enforced through the Section 1983 remedy. \n\nThe Constitutional Municipal Law Warrior is Volume XLII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full municipal constitutional landscape: Dillon's Rule versus Home Rule frameworks for municipal authority; constitutional zoning — Euclid v. Ambler Realty, exclusionary zoning and equal protection after Arlington Heights, and the taking dimensions of land use regulation; Monell municipal liability — official policies, widespread practices, inadequate training, ratification, and the single-incident exception; municipal immunity and indemnification; constitutional limits on municipal finance — the Contracts Clause and pension obligations, Chapter 9 bankruptcy, and TIF constitutional dimensions; First Amendment rights of municipal employees under Garcetti and Janus; and the complete First Amendment framework for challenging municipal content-based restrictions on speech and expression.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705309937737,"sku":"k5xy7g","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/7kd7rd9-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779915320"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-sentencing-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Sentencing Warrior","description":"Sentencing is where constitutional battles become personal — where the Sixth Amendment's promise of a jury trial determines not just guilt but the length of punishment, and where the constitutional warrior's mastery of sentencing doctrine translates directly into years of a client's freedom. \n\nThe Constitutional Sentencing Warrior is Volume XLIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional sentencing landscape: Apprendi v. New Jersey's rule requiring jury determination of facts that increase the prescribed statutory maximum; Blakely's application to state guidelines; Booker's holding that mandatory application of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines violated the Sixth Amendment and its remedial advisory rendering; Alleyne's extension of Apprendi to mandatory minimum triggers; Gall and Kimbrough's abuse-of-discretion reasonableness standard; the Section 3553(a) factors for a reasonable sentence; prior conviction enhancements after Almendarez-Torres; capital sentencing from Ring v. Arizona through Hurst v. Florida; and the First Step Act's retroactive sentence reduction provisions.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705344606281,"sku":"wx2j4w","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/7kd7r59-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779917571"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-healthcare-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Healthcare Warrior","description":"Healthcare is not explicitly mentioned in the Constitution — but constitutional law saturates every dimension of American healthcare. The Taxing Power that saved the ACA, the Spending Clause coercion doctrine that limited the Medicaid expansion, the Due Process and equal protection claims that challenge healthcare restrictions, and the post-Dobbs constitutional landscape for reproductive healthcare access all demonstrate that the constitutional warrior's toolkit is essential for healthcare litigation. \n\nThe Constitutional Healthcare Warrior is Volume XLIV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional healthcare landscape: the ACA's constitutional structure — the individual mandate as a tax after NFIB, the Texas v. United States severability challenge; Medicaid constitutional dimensions — Spending Clause basis, coercion doctrine, and work requirements; EMTALA's constitutional foundation and its post-Dobbs application; reproductive healthcare — post-Dobbs substantive due process, equal protection arguments, travel rights, shield laws, and funding restrictions under Maher v. Roe and Harris v. McRae; disability rights in healthcare under Olmstead; and pandemic public health measures from Jacobson v. Massachusetts through Tandon v. Newsom.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705362595913,"sku":"vwjzxm","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/kv7pzqn-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779920739"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-technology-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Technology Warrior","description":"Technology changes faster than constitutional doctrine. The Fourth Amendment was written for a world of physical papers and effects — not smartphones containing the digital equivalent of an entire life. The constitutional warrior who works in technology law must apply foundational constitutional principles to novel technological contexts, often before the Supreme Court has spoken. \n\nThe Constitutional Technology Warrior is Volume XLV of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional technology landscape: the Fourth Amendment and digital privacy — Riley v. California's warrant requirement for cell phone searches, Carpenter v. United States's limitation of the third-party doctrine, and frontier questions about email, cloud storage, and metadata; the First Amendment and social media — platform liability, government-compelled moderation, digital public forum doctrine, and must-carry requirements; AI regulation constitutional dimensions — First Amendment and automated decision-making, equal protection and algorithmic discrimination, and due process and AI determinations; biometric surveillance — facial recognition and the Fourth Amendment; government hacking; and the constitutional principles providing the framework for technology law's ongoing development.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705400967241,"sku":"y26mxn","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/45dk7wq-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779922794"},{"product_id":"thw-constitutional-privacy-warrior","title":"Thw Constitutional Privacy Warrior","description":"Privacy is not a word that appears in the Constitution — but the Supreme Court has recognized for over sixty years that the Constitution protects a right of privacy. From the marital bedroom that Griswold placed beyond government reach to the personal intimate choices that Lawrence protected, and through Dobbs's partial retreat from decisional privacy's dimensions, the constitutional privacy landscape requires careful navigation. \n\nThe Constitutional Privacy Warrior is Volume XLVI of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional privacy landscape: decisional privacy — Griswold, Eisenstadt, Roe, Casey, Lawrence, Obergefell, and Dobbs's Glucksberg-based retrenchment; informational privacy — constitutional limits on government databases, the Driver's Privacy Protection Act, and medical records; the First Amendment right to anonymous speech — McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission, Watchtower Bible v. Stratton, and compelled disclosure doctrine; medical privacy — HIPAA's constitutional dimensions and government access to medical records; family privacy — parental rights from Meyer and Pierce through Troxel; and the constitutional right against self-surveillance.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705439371337,"sku":"zgq84v","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/rm4pnyg-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779926907"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-civil-rights-enforcement-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Civil Rights Enforcement Warrior","description":"Section 1983 is the constitutional warrior's primary instrument for holding government officials accountable for constitutional violations — and the doctrine that governs its use is among the most strategically complex in federal civil practice. \n\nThe Constitutional Civil Rights Enforcement Warrior is Volume XLVII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full civil rights enforcement landscape: Section 1983's elements — color of law, deprivation of federal rights, causation, and damages; qualified immunity — Harlow's clearly established law standard, Pearson v. Callahan sequencing discretion, the circuit split, and Ziglar's heightened scrutiny for Bivens extensions; absolute immunity for prosecutors, judges, and legislators; supervisory liability after Iqbal's deliberate indifference requirement; Monell municipal liability in complete depth — official policies, widespread customs, inadequate training, ratification, and single-incident liability; Bivens actions — the Ziglar framework and surviving contexts; consent decrees and structural reform litigation under PLRA; and the complete damages framework including nominal and punitive damages.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705454346313,"sku":"68d7eq","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/e7n9m98-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779929752"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-appellate-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Appellate Warrior","description":"Appellate practice in constitutional cases is where the record built at trial either holds together or falls apart. The constitutional error that was perfectly preserved is reviewed de novo. The error that was not objected to is reviewed for plain error — a standard that saves few defendants. The structural constitutional error is grounds for automatic reversal without harmless error analysis. \n\nThe Constitutional Appellate Warrior is Volume XLVIII of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full constitutional appellate landscape: jurisdiction — final judgment rule, collateral order doctrine, § 1292(b) certified questions, and mandamus; certiorari practice — the circuit split, recurring important federal question, and percolation doctrine; standards of review — de novo for legal conclusions, clear error for factual findings, and mixed questions; preservation — specificity, timeliness, and the contemporaneous objection rule; plain error under Olano — error, plainness, effect on substantial rights, and the discretionary fourth prong; structural error — the short list including denial of counsel, biased judge, racial discrimination in jury selection, denial of public trial; harmless error — the Chapman v. California constitutional standard; and Supreme Court practice for constitutional cases.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55705469124681,"sku":"mv4jkp","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/jempvkj-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779932299"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-tribal-law-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Tribal Law Warrior","description":"Tribal sovereignty is a constitutional reality. Federally recognized Indian tribes are sovereign nations that predate the United States, and the Constitution explicitly recognizes their status through the Indian Commerce Clause. Treaty rights are the supreme law of the land. And the federal trust responsibility imposes fiduciary-like obligations on the federal government toward the tribes. \n\nThe Constitutional Tribal Law Warrior is Volume XLIX of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full tribal constitutional landscape: the foundations of tribal sovereignty — the Marshall trilogy and Worcester v. Georgia's enduring framework; the Indian Commerce Clause and Congress's plenary power; treaty rights — treaty interpretation principles and McGirt v. Oklahoma's reservation disestablishment holding; the federal trust responsibility and its enforceable dimensions; Public Law 280 and the allocation of civil and criminal jurisdiction; the Indian Reorganization Act and tribal constitutional governance; the Indian Civil Rights Act — due process guarantees, the habeas corpus provision (Santa Clara Pueblo v. Martinez), and limits on federal court jurisdiction; NAGPRA repatriation; tribal sovereign immunity; and gaming law constitutional dimensions under California v. Cabazon Band.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55706778632265,"sku":"2jd64z","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/95dneve-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779994611"},{"product_id":"the-constitutional-disabilities-rights-warrior","title":"The Constitutional Disabilities Rights Warrior","description":"Disability rights law sits at the intersection of constitutional and statutory guarantees. The ADA's Title II prohibition on discrimination by public entities is constitutionally grounded in Congress's Section 5 power — and the Supreme Court has evaluated whether Congress assembled sufficient evidence of constitutional violations to justify the ADA's abrogation of state immunity. Olmstead gives people with disabilities the right to live in the most integrated setting appropriate to their needs. \n\nThe Constitutional Disability Rights Warrior is Volume L of Wayne Richard Evangelista's Constitutional Law Series. \n\nWayne Richard Evangelista covers the full disability rights constitutional landscape: ADA Title II constitutional dimensions — Section 5 power, Tennessee v. Lane, United States v. Georgia, and Board of Trustees v. Garrett (Title I); Section 504 as a spending condition — its constitutional basis and Alexander v. Choate's meaningful access standard; the IDEA — constitutional due process from Rowley through Endrew F. v. Douglas County; Olmstead v. L.C. — the integration mandate, ADA Title II enforcement, and DOJ enforcement practice; City of Cleburne's rational basis with bite for intellectual disability classifications; and disability rights in criminal justice — competency, Ford v. Wainwright, Atkins v. Virginia, and Moore v. Texas.","brand":"Constitutional Law Series","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":55706800324681,"sku":"zgq8vg","price":69.99,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0981\/0896\/4937\/files\/e7ny5gm-front-shortedge-384.jpg?v=1779996255"}],"url":"https:\/\/constitutionallawseries.myshopify.com\/collections\/frontpage.oembed?page=5","provider":"The largest single-author Federal Law Library ever published. ","version":"1.0","type":"link"}