
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Lochner v New York, a 1905 Supreme Court case about working hours and contracts, is considered anti-canon. Right up there with Dred Scott, Plessy and Korematsu. The question is, how did it get there? Why do people think it's so bad? And what does this decision, and the era that followed, say about politics and the Supreme Court?
Our guides to this case and what came after are Rebecca Brown, Rader Family Trustee Chair in Law at USC Gould School of Law and Matthew Lindsay, Associate Professor of Law at University of Baltimore School of Law.
4.2
24872,487 ratings
Lochner v New York, a 1905 Supreme Court case about working hours and contracts, is considered anti-canon. Right up there with Dred Scott, Plessy and Korematsu. The question is, how did it get there? Why do people think it's so bad? And what does this decision, and the era that followed, say about politics and the Supreme Court?
Our guides to this case and what came after are Rebecca Brown, Rader Family Trustee Chair in Law at USC Gould School of Law and Matthew Lindsay, Associate Professor of Law at University of Baltimore School of Law.
6,133 Listeners
9,166 Listeners
1,107 Listeners
3,910 Listeners
8,682 Listeners
30,845 Listeners
32,299 Listeners
1,021 Listeners
119 Listeners
25,882 Listeners
137 Listeners
1,460 Listeners
4,624 Listeners
15,094 Listeners
2,413 Listeners
16,072 Listeners
809 Listeners
5,697 Listeners
1,353 Listeners
327 Listeners
6,273 Listeners
6 Listeners
962 Listeners
5 Listeners
2 Listeners
270 Listeners
35 Listeners
127 Listeners