The modern law of search and seizure permits warrantless
searches that ruin the citizenry's trust in law enforcement, harms
minorities, and embraces an individualistic notion of the rights
that it protects, ignoring essential roles that properly-conceived
protections of privacy, mobility, and property play in uniting
Americans. Many believe the Fourth Amendment is a poor bulwark
against state tyrannies, particularly during the War on Terror.
Historical amnesia has obscured the Fourth Amendment's positive
aspects, and Andrew E. Taslitz rescues its forgotten history in
Reconstructing the Fourth Amendment, which includes two novel
arguments. First, that the original Fourth Amendment of 1791--born
in political struggle between the English and the colonists--served
important political functions, particularly in regulating
expressive political violence. Second, that the Amendment's meaning
changed when the Fourteenth Amendment was created to give teeth to
outlawing slavery, and its focus shifted from primary emphasis on
individualistic privacy notions as central to a white democratic
polis to enhanced protections for group privacy, individual
mobility, and property in a multi-racial republic.
With an understanding of the historical roots of the Fourth
Amendment, suggests Taslitz, we can upend negative assumptions of
modern search and seizure law, and create new institutional
approaches that give political voice to citizens and safeguard
against unnecessary humiliation and dehumanization at the hands of
the police.
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