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An innovative narrative approach combines history, politics, and
legal doctrine to explore the origin and evolution of Americans'
constitutional right to free speech. In a field dominated by
jargon-filled texts and march-of-progress treatments, this book
presents an insightful introduction to freedom of speech,
skillfully blending legal analysis with accounts of how staunchly
contested historical, political, and cultural issues often
influenced legal reasoning. The volume traces the origins of the
freedom in English law and its development through the founding of
the United States, and examines how the unique struggles of 19th
century Americans over such issues as political parties, slavery,
women's rights, and economic inequality transformed this
traditional English right into a distinctively American one. The
book outlines the ways in which the U.S. Supreme Court became the
prime interpreter of the meaning of free speech and introduces
readers to current court rulings on the First Amendment. It also
speculates about the political and legal developments likely to
emerge in the new century. A-Z entries survey key individuals,
laws, events, judicial decisions, statutes, institutions,
organizations, and concepts Four narrative chapters examine
constitutional history, evolution of ideas in this area,
contemporary concerns and controversies, and prospects for the near
future based on today's challenges to the status quo
Since the 1980s, a ritualized opposition in legal thought between a
conservative 'originalism' and a liberal 'living constitutionalism'
has obscured the aggressively contested tradition committed to, and
mobilization of arguments for, constitutional restoration and
redemption within the broader postwar American conservative
movement. Conservatives and the Constitution is the first history
of the political and intellectual trajectory of this foundational
tradition and mobilization. By looking at the deep stories told
either by identity groups or about what conservatives took to be
flashpoint topics in the postwar period, Ken I. Kersch seeks to
capture the developmental and integrative nature of postwar
constitutional conservatism, challenging conservatives and liberals
alike to more clearly see and understand both themselves and their
presumed political and constitutional opposition. Conservatives and
the Constitution makes a unique contribution to our understanding
of modern American conservatism, and to the constitutional thought
that has, in critical ways, informed and defined it.
The modern jurisprudence of civil liberties and civil rights is
best understood, not as the application of principles to facts, but
as a product of currents of progressive reformist political
thought. This book demonstrates that rights of individuals in the
criminal justice system, workplace, and school now identified with
the essence of civil rights and liberties, were the end point of a
layered succession of progressive-spirited ideological and
political campaigns of statebuilding and reform. In questioning
this vision of constitutional development, this book integrates the
developmental paths of civil liberties law into an account of the
rise of the modern state and the reformist political and
intellectual movements that shaped and sustained it. In doing so,
Constructing Civil Liberties provides a vivid, multi-layered,
revisionist account of the genealogy of contemporary constitutional
law and morals.
The modern jurisprudence of civil liberties and civil rights is
best understood, not as the application of principles to facts, but
as a product of currents of progressive reformist political
thought. This book demonstrates that rights of individuals in the
criminal justice system, workplace, and school now identified with
the essence of civil rights and liberties, were the end point of a
layered succession of progressive-spirited ideological and
political campaigns of statebuilding and reform. In questioning
this vision of constitutional development, this book integrates the
developmental paths of civil liberties law into an account of the
rise of the modern state and the reformist political and
intellectual movements that shaped and sustained it. In doing so,
Constructing Civil Liberties provides a vivid, multi-layered,
revisionist account of the genealogy of contemporary constitutional
law and morals.
Since the 1980s, a ritualized opposition in legal thought between a
conservative 'originalism' and a liberal 'living constitutionalism'
has obscured the aggressively contested tradition committed to, and
mobilization of arguments for, constitutional restoration and
redemption within the broader postwar American conservative
movement. Conservatives and the Constitution is the first history
of the political and intellectual trajectory of this foundational
tradition and mobilization. By looking at the deep stories told
either by identity groups or about what conservatives took to be
flashpoint topics in the postwar period, Ken I. Kersch seeks to
capture the developmental and integrative nature of postwar
constitutional conservatism, challenging conservatives and liberals
alike to more clearly see and understand both themselves and their
presumed political and constitutional opposition. Conservatives and
the Constitution makes a unique contribution to our understanding
of modern American conservatism, and to the constitutional thought
that has, in critical ways, informed and defined it.
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