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Habeas Corpus: A Very Short Introduction (Paperback)
Loot Price: R242
Discovery Miles 2 420
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Habeas Corpus: A Very Short Introduction (Paperback)
Series: Very Short Introduction
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List price R293
Loot Price R242
Discovery Miles 2 420
You Save R51 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Legal scholar Amanda L. Tyler discusses the history and future of
habeas corpus in America and around the world. The concept of
habeas corpus-literally, to receive and hold the body-empowers
courts to protect the right of prisoners to know the basis on which
they are being held by the government and grant prisoners their
freedom when they are held unlawfully. It is no wonder that habeas
corpus has long been considered essential to freedom. For nearly
eight hundred years, the writ of habeas corpus has limited the
executive in the Anglo-American legal tradition from imprisoning
citizens and subjects with impunity. Writing in the eighteenth
century, the widely influential English jurist and commentator
William Blackstone declared the writ a "bulwark" of personal
liberty. Across the Atlantic, in the leadup to the American
Revolution, the Continental Congress declared that the habeas
privilege and the right to trial by jury were among the most
important rights in a free society. This Very Short Introduction
chronicles the storied writ of habeas corpus and how its common law
and statutory origins spread from England throughout the British
Empire and beyond, witnessing its use today around the world in
nations as varied as Canada, Israel, India, and South Korea.
Beginning with the English origins of the writ, the book traces its
historical development both as a part of the common law and as a
parliamentary creation born out of the English Habeas Corpus Act of
1679, a statute that so dramatically limited the executive's power
to detain that Blackstone called it no less than a "second Magna
Carta." The book then takes the story forward to explore how the
writ has functioned in the centuries since, including its
controversial suspension by President Abraham Lincoln during the
Civil War. It also analyzes the major role habeas corpus has played
in such issues as the World War II incarceration of Japanese
Americans and the US Supreme Court's recognition during the War on
Terror of the concept of a "citizen enemy combatant." Looking ahead
the story told in these pages reveals the immense challenges that
the habeas privilege faces today and suggests that in confronting
them, we would do well to remember how the habeas privilege brought
even the king of England to his knees before the law.
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