Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Law & Contemporary Problems

Abstract

The case of United States v. Miller, 307 U.S. 174 (1939), is often cited in gun-control arguments and arguments over the meaning of the Second Amendment. In this Article, we take a close look at Miller, and the arguments made before the Supreme Court. When the decision is read closely and the arguments available (and not available) to the Court are taken into account, the decision is best understood as leaving open the opportunity for courts to adopt the Standard Model reading of the Second Amendment. What Miller plainly does not do is deny that an individual's right to keep and bear arms is protected by the Second Amendment the holding ascribed to it by most federal courts since 1939.

First Page

113

Last Page

123

Publication Date

Spring 2003

Included in

Law Commons

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