Introduction: what is liberal?
Part I. Scalia's Judicial Philosophy
The Confirmation hearings
Scalia's principles of decision making
Part II. Scalia's Conservative Constitutional Opinions
First and Second Amendments
Constitutional criminal procedure
Privacy and individual rights
Government power and regulation
Part III. Scalia's Liberal Constitutional Opinions
First Amendment : freedom of speech and more
Fourth Amendment : search and seizure
Fifth Amendment : criminal applications
Sixth Amendment: right to trial by jury
Sixth Amendment: confrontation clause
Sixth Amendment: right to counsel
Seventh Amendment : right to jury trial
Separation of powers and federalism
Commerce clause and other provisions
Part IV. Scalia's Conflicted Constitutional Opinions
Free exercise of religion
Part V. Originalism Reconsidered
Fundamentals reconsidered : textualism and originalism
Fundamentals reconsidered : other doctrines
Conservative opinions reconsidered : individual rights
Conservative opinions reconsidered : other
Liberal opinions reconsidered
Conflicted opinions reconsidered
Part VI. Scalia's Nonconstitutional Opinions
Four liberal special cases
Liberal criminal statutory opinions
Liberal civil statutory opinions
Conservative statutory opinions
The other originalist justice
A. Justices who servied with Scalia
B. Scalia's non-judicial writings
C. Votes of other justices on Scalia's liberal opinions.