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That Eminent Tribunal
Judicial Supremacy and the Constitution

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 1 a 2 settimane

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Zusatztext "This is one of the few academic books that leave the reader asking for more rather than less. It is by a group of leading scholars who lament the judicial activism of federal courts over the past half-century! and particularly since Roe v. Wade . The variety and trenchancy of its arguments make it a significant contribution to the scholarly! and popular! debate over judicial power." -Charles R. Kesler! Claremont Institute! Editor of the Claremont Review of Books Informationen zum Autor Christopher Wolfe is Professor of Political Science at Marquette University. He is the author of How to Interpret the Constitution, Judicial Activism , and The Rise of Modern Judicial Review . Klappentext The role of the United States Supreme Court has been deeply controversial throughout American history. Should the Court undertake the task of guarding a wide variety of controversial and often unenumerated rights? Or should it confine itself to enforcing specific constitutional provisions, leaving other issues (even those of rights) to the democratic process? That Eminent Tribunal brings together a distinguished group of legal scholars and political scientists who argue that the Court's power has exceeded its appropriate bounds, and that sound republican principles require greater limits on that power. They reach this conclusion by an interesting variety of paths, and despite varied political convictions. Some of the essays debate the explicit claims to constitutional authority laid out by the Supreme Court itself in Planned Parenthood v. Casey and similar cases, and others focus on the defenses of judicial authority found commonly in legal scholarship (e.g., the allegedly superior moral reasoning of judges, or judges' supposed track record of superior political decision making). The authors find these arguments wanting and contend that the principles of republicanism and the contemporary form of judicial review exercised by the Supreme Court are fundamentally incompatible. The contributors include Hadley Arkes, Gerard V. Bradley, George Liebmann, Michael McConnell, Robert F. Nagel, Jack Wade Nowlin, Steven D. Smith, Jeremy Waldron, Keith E. Whittington, Christopher Wolfe, and Michael P. Zuckert. Zusammenfassung Should the Court undertake the task of guarding a wide variety of controversial and often unenumerated rights? This book brings together a distinguished group of legal scholars and political scientists who argue that the Court's power has exceeded its appropriate bounds, and that sound republican principles require greater limits on that power....

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Christopher Wolfe, Christopher (EDT) Wolfe
Con la collaborazione di Christopher Wolfe (Editore), Robert P. George (Editore), Robert Wolfe (Editore), Wolfe Christopher (Editore)
Editore Princeton University Press
 
Contenuto Libro
Forma del prodotto Tascabile
Data pubblicazione 05.09.2004
Categoria Guide e manuali > Diritto, professione, finanze > Diritto di famiglia
Scienze sociali, diritto, economia > Diritto > Diritto internazionale, diritto degli stranieri
 
EAN 9780691116686
ISBN 978-0-691-11668-6
Numero di pagine 256
Dimensioni (della confezione) 15.2 x 23.5 x 0.6 cm
 
Serie New Forum Books > 35
New Forum Books
Categorie USA, LAW / Courts, LAW / Constitutional, LAW / Trial Practice, United States of America, USA, Courts & procedure, Legal systems: courts and procedures, Constitutional & administrative law, Constitutional and administrative law: general
 

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