Fr. 54.50

Ex Post Facto Clause - Its History and Role in a Punitive Society

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

Descrizione

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The Ex Post Facto Clause, one of the few civil liberty protections found in the body of the US Constitution, reflects the Framers' acute concern over the tendency of legislatures to enact burdensome retroactive laws targeting unpopular individuals. In The Ex Post Facto Clause, Wayne A. Logan provides the first book-length examination of the history of the Clause and its potential for tempering the punitive impulses of modern American legislatures. Drawing on Framing Era history, seminal Supreme Court decisions, and the global embrace of the values underlying the Ex Post Facto Clause, Logan provides a blueprint for how the Clause can play a reinvigorated and more robust role in guarding against the penal populism besetting modern American legislatures.

Sommario










  • Introduction

  • Chapter 1: Background and Early History

  • Chapter 2: The Supreme Court Weighs In: Calder v. Bull (1798)

  • Chapter 3: Formative Nineteenth Century Developments

  • Chapter 4: Late Nineteenth Century to 1990: A Period of Retrenchment

  • Chapter 5: The 1990s to the Present

  • Chapter 6: Recasting the "Punishment Question"

  • Chapter 7: Broadening the Scope of Coverage

  • Chapter 8: Global Perspectives

  • Appendix A

  • Appendix B

  • Index



Info autore

Wayne A. Logan is the Steven M. Goldstein Professor of Law at Florida State University. He is the author or co-author of several books and almost a hundred book chapters and law review articles, with work appearing in such publications as the Georgetown Law Journal, the Michigan Law Review, the Pennsylvania Law Review, and the Texas Law Review. He is an elected member of the American Law Institute and a past chair of the Criminal Justice Section of the Association of American Law Schools.

Riassunto

The first comprehensive examination of the US Constitution's Ex Post Facto Clause, surveying its history and the critical role it can and should play in combatting the punitive tendencies of American legislatures.

The Ex Post Facto Clause, one of the few civil liberty protections found in the body of the US Constitution, reflects the Framers' acute concern over the tendency of legislatures to enact burdensome retroactive laws targeting unpopular individuals. Over time, a broad array of Americans have invoked the protective cloak of the Clause, including Confederate sympathizers in the late 1860s; immigrants in the early 1900s; Communist Party members in the 1950s; and, since the 1990s, convicted sex offenders. Although the Supreme Court enforced the Clause with vigor during the first several decades of the nation's history, of late the justices have been less than zealous defenders of the security it was intended to provide. And, even more problematic, they have done so amid major changes in the nation's social, political, and institutional life that have made the protections of the Ex Post Facto Clause all the more important.

The Ex Post Facto Clause provides the first book-length examination of the history of the Clause and its potential for tempering the punitive impulses of modern American legislatures. Wayne A. Logan chronicles and critiques the evolving treatment of ex post facto claims by the Supreme Court, which has created a body of law that is both at odds with the Framers' intent and ill-suited to the unforgiving and harshly punitive nation that America has become. Drawing on Framing Era history, seminal Supreme Court decisions, and the global embrace of the values underlying the Ex Post Facto Clause, Logan provides a blueprint for how the Clause can play a reinvigorated and more robust role in guarding against the penal populism besetting modern American legislatures.

Testo aggiuntivo

This is a richly detailed account of an understudied constitutional clause that presents an innovative argument for its reinvigoration. Logan's work directly contributes to legal and historical scholarship on American constitutional and criminal law, but political scientists, sociologists, and criminologists interested in criminal justice reform will be interested in his prescription to use the provision to check punitive lawmaking...As research grows exploring the problems of American criminal justice, The Ex Post Facto Clause is a noteworthy contribution advancing a novel argument to reinterpret an oft-ignored constitutional tool to constrain punitive lawmaking.

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