The appointment of Earl Warren as Chief Justice of the United
States in 1953 marked the opening of a new era in the nation's
constitutional development. In these lectures, originally given in
somewhat shorter form in Honolulu in the summer of 1967 under the
joint auspices of Harvard Law School and the University of Hawaii,
Archibald Cox describes the main lines of constitutional
development under the Warren Court. He analyzes the underlying
pressures involved and the long-range institutional consequences in
terms of the distribution of governmental power.
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