This book argues that, given the political power the Supreme Court enjoys today, the answer to preserving the separation of powers, democracy, and the American commitment to unalienable human rights is to encourage the Court to intentionally serve as the nation's collective conscience, just as it did in Brown v. Board of Education.
This book argues that, given the political power the Supreme Court enjoys today, the answer to preserving the separation of powers, democracy, and the American commitment to unalienable human rights is to encourage the Court to intentionally serve as the nation's collective conscience, just as it did in Brown v. Board of Education.
Kerry L. Hunter is full professor in the Department of Political Economy at the College of Idaho.
Inhaltsangabe
Chapter One: Approaching the United States Constitution: Sacred Covenant or Mere Plaything For Lawyers and Judges Chapter Two: American Utopian Constitutionalism Chapter Three: Hamilton's Court as Conscience Chapter Four: The Umpire Has No Clothes Chapter Five: Toward Embracing Hamilton's Ideal
Chapter One: Approaching the United States Constitution: Sacred Covenant or Mere Plaything For Lawyers and Judges Chapter Two: American Utopian Constitutionalism Chapter Three: Hamilton's Court as Conscience Chapter Four: The Umpire Has No Clothes Chapter Five: Toward Embracing Hamilton's Ideal
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