En savoir plus
In this book, Hadley Arkes seeks to restore, for a new generation, the jurisprudence of the late Justice of the Supreme Court George Sutherland--a jurisprudence anchored in the understanding of natural rights. The doctrine of natural rights has become controversial in our own time, while Sutherland has been widely maligned and screened from our historical memory. He is remembered today as one of the "four horsemen" who resisted Roosevelt and the New Deal; but we have forgotten his leadership in the cause of voting rights for women. Both liberal and conservative jurists now deride Sutherland, yet both groups continue to draw upon his writings. Liberals look to Sutherland for a jurisprudence that protects "privacy" against the rule of majorities, as in matters concerning abortion or gay rights. Conservatives will appeal to his defense of freedom in the economy.
However, both liberals and conservatives deny the premises of natural rights that provided the ground, and coherence, of Sutherland's teaching. Arkes contends that Sutherland can supply what is missing in both conservative and liberal jurisprudence. He argues that if a new generation can look again, with unclouded eyes, at the writings of Sutherland, both liberals and conservatives can be led back to the moral ground of their jurisprudence. This compelling intellectual biography introduces readers to an urbane man, and a steely judge, who has been made a stranger to them.
Table des matières
| Preface | |
| Acknowledgments | |
Ch. I | The Figure in the Carpet | 3 |
Ch. II | From the Frontier to the Court: The Shaping of a Mind | 39 |
Ch. III | A Jurisprudence of Natural Rights | 51 |
Ch. IV | The Heavenly World of the New Deal Lawyers | 83 |
Ch. V | The Puzzle of the Commerce Clause | 119 |
Ch. VI | Undoing the Discipline of the Constitution: Delegations of Authority and Independent Counsels | 159 |
Ch. VII | "In This Vast External Realm ... ": The Imperatives of Foreign Policy and the Dissolving of the Constitution | 196 |
Ch. VIII | Sutherland and the Mysteries of the Law | 242 |
| Index | 293 |
A propos de l'auteur
Hadley Arkes
Résumé
Seeks to restore the jurisprudence of the late Justice of the Supreme Court George Sutherland - a jurisprudence anchored in the understanding of natural rights. He is remembered as one of the "four horsemen" who resisted Roosevelt and the New Deal; but we have forgotten his leadership in the cause of voting rights for women.
Texte suppl.
"Arkes's work is a welcome addition to this emerging body of constitutional thought. If given the attention it deserves, it may well fulfill both objectives embodied in its title."---Judge Alex Kozinski, National Review