Ben Keener
@btkeener.bsky.social
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Aspiring jurisconsult
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=3865326
pinned post!
Now online with the Penn Law Review! SSRN:
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
5 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Lawrence Solum
10 days ago
The Weekend Edition of Legal Theory Stack is now available at this link:
lsolum.substack.com/p/legal-theo...
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Legal Theory Stack | Sunday, April 6, 2026
All the kegal theory for this weekend!
https://lsolum.substack.com/p/legal-theory-stack-sunday-april-6
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Lawrence Solum
13 days ago
Whittington and Heilpern on the Citizenship Clause and Birthright Citizenship Keith E. Whittington (Yale University Law School) and James Heilpern (Georgetown University Law Center) have posted “Subject To The Jurisdiction” As Legal Text on SSRN. Here is the abstract: The Citizenship Clause of the…
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Whittington and Heilpern on the Citizenship Clause and Birthright Citizenship
Keith E. Whittington (Yale University Law School) and James Heilpern (Georgetown University Law Center) have posted “Subject To The Jurisdiction” As Legal Text on SSRN. Here is the abstract: The Citizenship Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees citizenship to all persons born in the United States and “subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” This Article challenges the allegiance-based model by applying an original public meaning framework to the Citizenship Clause.
https://legaltheoryblog.com/2026/04/02/whittington-and-heilpern-on-the-citizenship-clause-and-birthright-citizenship/
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Thanks, Anthony!!
add a skeleton here at some point
14 days ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Volokh Conspiracy
14 days ago
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[Keith E. Whittington] On the Original Legal Meaning of "Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof"
The allegiance reading has no basis in the historical usage of this language in American law
http://dlvr.it/TRps48
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Volokh Conspiracy
29 days ago
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[Orin S. Kerr] How AI Tools Can Help With Legal History Research
Probably not the most in-demand use, but a really cool one. And maybe something that makes originalism easier?
http://dlvr.it/TRY6KW
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reposted by
Ben Keener
National Constitution Center
about 1 month ago
#OnThisDay in 1789, the Constitution officially goes into effect, marking the beginning of the new federal government under the framework we still follow today. Learn more about the U.S. government’s start under its new Constitution:
https://ow.ly/V7KI50Yn5Gh
#OnThisDay
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On this day, government begins under our Constitution | Constitution Center
It was on this day in 1789 that the federal government started to operate under the terms of the U.S. Constitution, as the Confederation Congress ceded power. However, there was a major problem with the first session of the new Congress: not enough members showed up.
https://ow.ly/V7KI50Yn5Gh
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Keith E. Whittington
about 1 month ago
My latest on birthright citizenship in The Dispatch
@thedispatchmedia.bsky.social
thedispatch.com/article/birt...
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The Historic Case for Birthright Citizenship
The Trump administration’s efforts to narrow the scope of the 14th Amendment are based on revisionist history.
https://thedispatch.com/article/birthright-citizenship-history-constitution/
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Volokh Conspiracy
about 1 month ago
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[Keith E. Whittington] Birthright Citizenship is Our Law
New piece on birthright citizenship in English and American law
http://dlvr.it/TRFL57
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Grateful for the citation
@jedshug.bsky.social
and
@evanbernick.bsky.social
!
add a skeleton here at some point
about 2 months ago
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Although my own paper with the Penn Law Review focuses on the English common law exclusively,
@kewhittington.bsky.social
and I agree on the original rule. Glad to see this out in print! My paper:
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
add a skeleton here at some point
2 months ago
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Ben Keener
Keith E. Whittington
2 months ago
My paper on the original meaning of birthright citizenship is now published
add a skeleton here at some point
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Ben Keener
Anthony Sanders
2 months ago
But it's better in the original Law French. Also, go Selden Society!
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“Note that whoever is born upon the king's land is the king's subject, and whoever is [present] upon any part of the land, even if he is an alien, owes obedience to the king” Edward Coke
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2 months ago
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Here’s the clincher. Another set of Coke’s private notes on the subject
2 months ago
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Below are Edward Cokes’s notes on the Postnati problem before Calvin’s Case. Clear evidence that the traditional view of birthright subjecthood is correct:
2 months ago
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Ben Keener
Keith E. Whittington
4 months ago
Some reading given the Court’s docket
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Now online with the Penn Law Review! SSRN:
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
5 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
I’ll continue to direct interested readers to my paper “Calvin’s Case and Birthright Citizenship” (with Penn Law Review) that explains the origins of the rule in detail. “Jus soli” might not have been used in 1608, but it didn’t appear out of thin air
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
add a skeleton here at some point
9 months ago
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Now online with the Penn Law Review! SSRN:
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
5 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Lawrence Solum
7 months ago
Both Legal Theory Blog and the Legal Theory Lexicon are moving to Wordpress and new web addresses: Legal Theory Blog: Legal Theory Blog: Legal Theory Blog:
legaltheoryblog.com
Legal Theory Lexicon: https:/legaltheorylexicon.com/
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legaltheoryblog.com
https://buff.ly/CpmLf2t
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Another important piece about birthright citizenship and the common law. Grateful for the cite,
@kewhittington.bsky.social
!
add a skeleton here at some point
8 months ago
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I’ll continue to direct interested readers to my paper “Calvin’s Case and Birthright Citizenship” (with Penn Law Review) that explains the origins of the rule in detail. “Jus soli” might not have been used in 1608, but it didn’t appear out of thin air
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
add a skeleton here at some point
9 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Public Law
10 months ago
... and national security in Hong Kong). Articles are from Jeffrey Goldsworthy (on Dr Bonham's Case);
@anuragdeb.bsky.social
and
@colinmurray.bsky.social
(on Art 2 of the Winsor Framework the Legacy Act and the IMA); Lisa Burton Crawford and Janina Boughey (on Automated Information about Law); ...
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It is a huge honor to be cited by Jeffrey Goldsworthy, a titan of public law and legal philosophy. Everyone should read his latest synopsis of the literature on Bonham's Case.
9 months ago
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Thanks very much,
@evanbernick.bsky.social
! Still waiting on a rebuttal 🤷🏻‍♂️
add a skeleton here at some point
11 months ago
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Thank you for the share
@lsolum.bsky.social
!
add a skeleton here at some point
11 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
When CJ John Marshall ruled that PA was obliged to return a prize of war in US v. Peters (1809), governor Snyder raised a militia army to resist enforcement. When asked to support PA and defy the Supreme Court, President Madison wrote: (1/3)
12 months ago
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When CJ John Marshall ruled that PA was obliged to return a prize of war in US v. Peters (1809), governor Snyder raised a militia army to resist enforcement. When asked to support PA and defy the Supreme Court, President Madison wrote: (1/3)
12 months ago
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For those interested in what enemy invasions looked like as a matter of English common law, I’d direct them to my latest paper, pages 15 on
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
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12 months ago
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Grateful for the acknowledgement from the ImmigrationProf Blog!
lawprofessors.typepad.com/immigration/...
12 months ago
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Thanks very much for the mention!
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12 months ago
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Thanks for the share,
@evanbernick.bsky.social
! I'll look forward to engagement as well
add a skeleton here at some point
12 months ago
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Ben Keener
Evan Bernick, a finite mode with a smol hooman and a lorg floof
12 months ago
Enjoy.
m.youtube.com/watch?v=IA4z...
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Birthright Citizenship: An Originalist Debate
YouTube video by The Federalist Society
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IA4z3dgUNW4
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Interesting debate today. Most interesting, besides the qualification that the order may be unconstitutional, is the note at 41:10 that aliens present in amity get a right to a treason trial (1/4)
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12 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Lawrence Solum
12 months ago
Estreicher & Reddy on Birthright Citizenship,
buff.ly/iHuWmr5
- Samuel Estreicher (New York University School of Law) & Rudra Reddy have posted Revisiting the Scope of Constitutional Birthright Citizenship on SSRN.
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https://buff.ly/iHuWmr5
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Legal History Blog
12 months ago
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Ablavsky & Berger on Birthright Citizenship -- "Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof: The Indian Law Context"
Gregory Ablavsky (Stanford Law) and Bethany Berger (University of Iowa College of Law) have posted "Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof: The Indian Law Context" - a timely intervention in the debate over birthright citizenship. The article will appear in the online companion to the New York University Law Review. Here's the abstract: Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”  Much of the debate over the meaning of this provision in the nineteenth century, especially what it meant to be “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States, concerned the distinctive status of Native peoples—who were largely not birthright citizens even though born within the borders of United States. It is unsurprising, then, that the Trump Administration and others have seized on these precedents in their attempt to unsettle black-letter law on birthright citizenship.  But their arguments that this history demonstrates that jurisdiction meant something other than its ordinary meaning at the time—roughly, the power to make, decide, and enforce law—are anachronistic and wrong. They ignore the history of federal Indian law. For most of the first century of the United States, the unique status of Native nations as quasi-foreign entities was understood to place these nations’ internal affairs beyond Congress’s legislative jurisdiction. By the 1860s, this understanding endured within federal law, but it confronted increasingly vocal challenges. The arguments over the Fourteenth Amendment, then, recapitulated this near century of debate over Native status. In crafting the citizenship clause, members of Congress largely agreed that jurisdiction meant the power to impose laws; where they heatedly disagreed was whether Native nations were, in fact, subject to that authority. Most concluded they were not, and in 1884, in Elk v. Wilkins, the Supreme Court affirmed the conclusion that Native nations’ quasi-foreign status excluded tribal citizens from birthright citizenship. But the “anomalous” and “peculiar” status of Native nations, in the words of the nineteenth-century Supreme Court, means that the law governing tribal citizens cannot and should not be analogized to the position of other communities—or at least any communities who lack a quasi-foreign sovereignty and territory outside most federal and state law but within the borders of the United States. Indeed, the Court in Wong Kim Ark expressly rejected the attempt to invoke Elk v. Wilkins to deny birthright citizenship to a Chinese man born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents, ruling that the decision “concerned only members of the Indian tribes within the United States.” The analogy has no more validity today than it did then, and the current Court should continue to reject it. Read on here, at SSRN. -- Karen Tani
http://dlvr.it/TKGxz8
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Ben Keener
Volokh Conspiracy
12 months ago
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[Ilya Somin] Free Press Symposium on "Is Donald Trump Breaking the Law?"
The degree of agreement among participants with major ideological diferences is striking.
http://dlvr.it/TKGs9t
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Evan Bernick, a finite mode with a smol hooman and a lorg floof
12 months ago
Keener's article is here. Wurman has said he'll respond to it. For now, however, the draft is missing a jarring claim from op-ed that seems clearly wrong. End.
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
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Calvin's Case and Birthright Citizenship
<p>Calvin’s Case established the birthright rule for English subjects. President Trump’s Executive Order 14160 asserts that the children of illegally present al
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=5197388
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Evan Bernick, a finite mode with a smol hooman and a lorg floof
12 months ago
There are two big problems here, elegantly set forth in an important
@btkeener.bsky.social
essay about the legacy of Calvin's Case, the foundational common-law birthright citizenship decision. The first: It's not clear parental amity matters. The second: Unlawful entrants are certainly in amity. 2.
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Find my paper here!
papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers....
add a skeleton here at some point
12 months ago
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reposted by
Ben Keener
Evan Bernick, a finite mode with a smol hooman and a lorg floof
12 months ago
One of the striking omissions here (which Wurman, to his credit, says he’ll cure) is that the draft doesn’t engage
@btkeener.bsky.social
on whether unlawful entrants were “in amity” with the U.S. I think it very clear that they were, which would make their children citizens. And I can’t but observe…
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