The Constitution in Congress series has been called nothing less
than a biography of the US Constitution for its in-depth
examination of the role that the legislative and executive branches
have played in the development of constitutional interpretation.
This third volume in the series, the early installments of which
dealt with the Federalist and Jeffersonian eras, continues this
examination with the Jacksonian revolution of 1829 and subsequent
efforts by Democrats to dismantle Henry Clay's celebrated "American
System" of nationalist economics. David P. Currie covers the
political events of the period leading up to the start of the Civil
War, showing how the slavery question, although seldom overtly
discussed in the debates included in this volume, underlies the
Southern insistence on strict interpretation of federal powers.
Like its predecessors, The Constitution in Congress: Democrats and
Whigs will be an invaluable reference for legal scholars and
constitutional historians alike.
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