Here’s the latest I can share based on current reporting up to now.
- The Fourteenth Amendment remains a central constitutional provision governing citizenship, due process, and equal protection, and it continues to be invoked in debates over voting rights, affirmative action, and due process in various contexts. Recent legal coverage notes ongoing challenges and interpretations of Equal Protection and Due Process in contemporary cases.[1][3]
- There has been continued analysis and discussion about how the Court has approached Section 5 and enforcement provisions under the Insurrection Clause in connection with elections and public office eligibility, with multiple post-2020 developments shaping lower court and state-level interpretations.[2][7]
- Public-facing resources summarize the amendment’s broad impact, including its 14th Amendment Center analyses and educational explanations highlighting how due process and equal protection have influenced landmark rulings and civil rights protections over time.[4][5]
If you’d like, I can narrow to a specific topic (e.g., voting rights, affirmative action, or state enforcement of the 14th Amendment) and pull the most recent detailed items with summaries.
Sources
The Supreme Court's decision to gut affirmative action in college admissions one year ago has opened the door for numerous legal challenges against race-based grant programs, internships and…
www.cnn.comThe Fourteenth Amendment has affected a broad range of American life, from business regulation to civil liberties to the rights of criminal defendants.
www.annenbergclassroom.orgEssays, analysis, and news about and from the 14th Amendment Center for Law and Democracy, led by civil rights lawyer Sherrilyn Ifill.
14thamendmentctr.orgThe Fourteenth Amendment, one of the three Reconstruction Amendments, enshrined in the U.S. Constitution the principle that had formed the basis for the Civil Rights Act of 1866: that all people born in the United States were U.S. citizens in addition to being citizens of the states in which they resided. The amendment prohibited the states from abridging the privileges and
www.fjc.govAfter President Donald Trump instigated the January 6 Capitol attack to disrupt the 2021 Electoral College vote count, a group of Colorado voters contested his presidential eligibility under Section 3, seeking to disqualify him from the state's ballots in the 2024 presidential election. In *Trump v. Anderson* (2024), the Supreme Court held that Section 5 delegates enforcement of the Insurrection Clause to Congress for federal and state officers, while allowing states to also impose...
wikipedia.nucleos.comOf all the amendments to the U.S. Constitution, the 14th is a big one. It's shaped all of our lives, whether we realize it or not: Roe v. Wade, Brown v. Board of Education, Bush v. Gore, plus other Supreme Court cases that legalized same-sex marriage, interracial marriage, access to birth control — they've all been built on the back of the 14th. The amendment was ratified after the Civil War, and it's packed full of lofty phrases like due process, equal protection, and liberty. But what do...
www.npr.orgThe Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was adopted on July 9, 1868, as one of the Reconstruction Amendments. Usually considered one of the m...
www.wikiwand.comInformation about the Law Professor Blogs Network.
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