Legal uncertainty is particularly high in constitutional law,
where the Supreme Court may overrule earlier decisions as not
conforming to the Constitution. This critical study of
constitutional decision-making in the Supreme Court emphasizes the
failures of the justices to consider constitutional structure and
the original meaning of language in context. Conant criticizes the
Supreme Court's opinions supporting racial segregation and the
perpetuation of a caste system until the final overruling in "Brown
v. Board of Education"; the Court's antitrust exemption of
professional baseball; and the recent finding that physical
desecration of the flag is protected under freedom of speech.
This study challenges the view of the liberal scholars who argue
that the Supreme Court must redefine the Constitution to keep up
with the changing times, because this view gives approval for
judicial usurpation of the amending power. It also rejects the view
of conservative scholars, who contend that the Supreme Court must
search for the intent of the framers of the Constitution, on the
grounds that subjective intent is impossible to research. There was
no verbatim reporter at the 1787 convention, and no such notes were
available to the ratifying conventions in the states that rendered
the proposed constitution into law in 1789. Following the
methodology of Justice Holmes, Conant focuses this work on
constitutional purposes and the meaning of language within its
total social context at the time of its adoption.
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