Fr. 60.50

Concept of Ordered Liberty and the Common-Law Due-Process Tradition - Slaughterhouse Cases Through Obergefell V. Hodges (18722015)

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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In The Concept of Ordered Liberty, a lineage of common-law judges spanning a century and a half protect a precious jewel of legal reasoning from the corrupting influence of partisan ideologies. A recursion to the concept of ordered liberty promises to bridge the deep divide among the Court's current liberal and conservative factions.

List of contents










Contents
Prologue
Part I: The Common-Law Tradition
1A Bulwark Against Arbitrary Legislation
2Liberty and Economic Ideology
3 Philosophy, Incorporation, and Natural Law
4A Reasonable and Sensitive Judgment
5A Zone of Substantive Rights
Part II: Fundamental Rights and Modern Conservatism
6Procedural and Substantive Due Process
7Deeply Rooted in History and Tradition
8A Different Description of Fundamental Liberties
9The Inquiry Thus Reduces
Part III: The Modern Justification for Arbitrariness Review
10The Dimension of Personal Liberty
11The Guideposts of History, Tradition, and Practice
12The Tradition Is A Living Thing
Part IV: A More Transcendent Liberty
13Certain Actions Are Prohibited
14A Prudential Exercise Of The Judicial Power
15What Freedom Must Become
Epilogue


About the author










By Matthew W. Lunder

Product details

Authors Matthew W Lunder, Matthew W. Lunder
Publisher Lexington Books
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 15.11.2022
 
EAN 9781793626363
ISBN 978-1-79362-636-3
No. of pages 284
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Law > Public law, administrative procedural law, constitutional procedural law

LAW / Constitutional, Constitution, Constitutional & administrative law

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