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Antonin Scalia and American Constitutionalism - The Historical Significance of a Judicial Icon (Hardcover)
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Antonin Scalia and American Constitutionalism - The Historical Significance of a Judicial Icon (Hardcover)
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Antonin Scalia and American Constitutionalism is an in-depth study
of Justice Antonin Scalia's jurisprudence, his work on the Supreme
Court, and his significance in the history of American
constitutionalism. After tracing Scalia's rise to Associate Justice
and his subsequent emergence as a hero of the Republican Party and
the political right, this book reviews and criticizes his general
jurisprudential theory, arguing that he failed to produce either
the objective method he claimed or the correct constitutional
results he promised. Focusing on his judicial performance over his
thirty years on the Court, it examines his decisions and opinions
on virtually all of the constitutional issues he addressed from the
fundamentals of structure (federalism, separation of powers, and
the Article III judicial power) to specific interpretations of most
major constitutional provisions involving governmental powers and
the rights of individuals under the Bill of Rights and the
Fourteenth Amendment. This book argues that Scalia applied his
jurisprudential theories in inconsistent and contradictory ways and
often ignored, distorted, or abandoned the interpretive methods he
proclaimed to reach the results he sought, results that were
aligned with and supported by the post-Reagan Republican coalition.
Scalia was far more consistent in enforcing such ideologically
compatible results than he was in following his proclaimed
jurisprudential theories. Finally, assessing Scalia's historical
significance, Antonin Scalia and American Constitutionalism argues
that his jurisprudence and career are particularly illuminating
because they exemplify-contrary to his persistent claims-three
paramount characteristics of American constitutionalism: the
inherent inadequacy of originalism and other formal interpretive
methodologies to produce consistent and correct answers to
controverted constitutional questions; the close relationship that
exists, particularly so in Scalia's case, between constitutional
theories and interpretations on one hand and substantive political
goals and values on the other; and the unavoidably living nature of
American constitutionalism itself. All in all, Scalia stands as a
towering figure of irony because his judicial career deconstructed
the central claims of his own jurisprudence.
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