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Interpreting the Constitution (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,788
Discovery Miles 17 880
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Interpreting the Constitution (Hardcover)
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This third volume about legal interpretation focuses on the
interpretation of a constitution, most specifically that of the
United States of America. In what may be unique, it combines a
generalized account of various claims and possibilities with an
examination of major domains of American constitutional law. This
demonstrates convincingly that the book's major themes not only can
be supported by individual examples, but are undeniably in accord
with the continuing practice of the United States Supreme Court
over time, and cannot be dismissed as misguided. The book's central
thesis is that strategies of constitutional interpretation cannot
be simple, that judges must take account of multiple factors not
systematically reducible to any clear ordering. For any
constitution that lasts over centuries and is hard to amend,
original understanding cannot be completely determinative. To
discern what that is, both how informed readers grasped a provision
and what were the enactors' aims matter. Indeed, distinguishing
these is usually extremely difficult, and often neither is really
discernible. As time passes what modern citizens understand becomes
important, diminishing the significance of original understanding.
Simple versions of textualist originalism neither reflect what has
taken place nor is really supportable. The focus on specific
provisions shows, among other things, the obstacles to discerning
original understanding, and why the original sense of proper
interpretation should itself carry importance. For applying the
Bill of Rights to states, conceptions conceived when the Fourteenth
Amendment was adopted should take priority over those in 1791. But
practically, for courts, to interpret provisions differently for
the federal and state governments would be highly unwise. The scope
of various provisions, such as those regarding free speech and
cruel and unusual punishment, have expanded hugely since both 1791
and 1865. And questions such as how much deference judges should
accord the political branches depend greatly on what provisions and
issues are involved. Even with respect to single provisions, such
as the Free Speech Clause, interpretive approaches have sensibly
varied, greatly depending on the more particular subjects involved.
How much deference judges should accord political actors also
depends critically on the kind of issue involved.
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