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The Myths of Textualism and Their Relevance To the ALI’s Restatement of the Law, Copyright
Author(s) -
Jon O. Newman
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the columbia journal of law and the arts
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2161-9271
pISSN - 1544-4848
DOI - 10.52214/jla.v44i3.8101
Subject(s) - statute , statutory interpretation , law , supreme court , economic justice , mythology , statutory law , political science , common law , sociology , philosophy , theology
In 2015, Justice Elena Kagan famously proclaimed, “We’re all textualists now.”  To which I ask, “When were we not?” Justice Kagan not only used the word “now,” but also provided her evidence that being a textualist is of recent vintage.  She asserted that when she was at the Harvard Law School in 1983, the inquiry concerning a statute was “what should this statute be,” rather than what do “the words on the paper say.”  And she attributed this inquiry to a “policy-oriented” approach with judges “pretending to be congressmen.” With respect, I cannot credit this evidence. I started my law school years thirty years earlier at Yale Law School, which reveled in its reputation for being concerned with “policy,” yet I never once heard a professor suggest that the text of a statute should be ignored in favor of a “policy” interpretation.  “Policy” was thought relevant when a statutory provision was unclear, or, in nonstatutory cases, when existing case law provided no clear answer.  Of course, even in a statutory case, the policy to be implemented was the policy preferred by Congress, not by judges. I take on the task of refuting Justice Kagan because I believe the “now” in her statement is only one of many myths about textualism, myths often perpetuated by some judges, legal scholars, and politicians, especially when they disagree with a court’s decision.  Refuting these myths is particularly relevant to the current controversy within the American Law Institute concerning the effort to craft a Restatement of the Law, Copyright.

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