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MAINTENANCE. According to political scientist Morgan Marietta, the recent judgments of the American Supreme Court mark a change of constitutional regime.
Interview by Claire Meynial
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Fin June, Americans saw their country turned upside down by a series of laws: out of 14 judgments handed down this year by the Supreme Court, 13 go in the direction of the conservatives. In one year, the federal right to abortion, which had been guaranteed since 1973, disappeared. It becomes easier to carry a concealed weapon and the environmental protection agency can no longer regulate greenhouse gas emissions. Beyond the effect of each decision, Morgan Marietta, professor of constitutional law at Lowell University in Massachusetts and author of an annual series on Supreme Court decisions, describes the profound implications of a profound revolution in American politics.
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