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The Aristocracy of the Long Robe - The Origins of Judicial Review in America (Hardcover, New)
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The Aristocracy of the Long Robe - The Origins of Judicial Review in America (Hardcover, New)
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Is judicial review constitutionally required or even authorized?
Can it be said whether the federal courts exercise this power with
the consent of the electorate? Sosin addresses these challenging
questions in the broad context of the Anglo-American historical
experience. He examines the evolution of courts of judicature and
legislatures and the contests for power that were waged from the
seventeenth to eighteenth century. The origins of the English court
system and the establishment of common law are first described. The
author traces the rise in judicial and parliamentary power that
occurred with the erosion of the royal prerogative and discusses
the constitutional and legal heritage that provided the framework
for law, courts, and legislatures in colonial America. Following an
examination of political, legislative, and legal development during
the colonial period, Sosin looks at the philosophical and
ideological controversies that influenced the framing of the
Constitution, particulary the conflicting views of the proper
relationship between the legislature and judiciary. Despite the
emphatic opposition voiced by some framers to giving judges the
power to overturn legislative action by ruling on the
constitutionality of federal laws, the Supreme Court was able to
declare itself the final arbiter and ultimate interpreter of the
Constitution as early as the first decade of the nineteenth
century. The author's analysis indicates that the Court's
assumption of the power of judicial review was neither inevitable
politically nor the logical result of the founders desire to limit
government and protect the rights of individuals against
interferences by public authority. Echoing early English and
American political figures, Sosin asks whether this expanded,
arbitrary judicial power can be considered appropriate in a
representative democracy. The product of meticulous research and
careful historical analysis, this provocative study will be
relevant reading for a variety of courses in American government,
political science, and history.
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