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Tennesseans pioneered innovations in self-government beginning in
1772, and they have continued to do so since the enactment of their
first formal constitution in 1796. Over time, Tennessee has
adopted, abolished, and changed it's constitution as political and
social needs demanded and allowed.
In The Tennessee State Constitution, Lewis L. Laska provides a
comprehensive introduction to Tennessee's constitution including a
history of its development beginning in the 1700s,
article-by-article commentary on the constitution itself, and an
extensive bibliography of Tennessee constitutional history. This
essential guide to the Tennessee constitution also presents
valuable commentary on the constitution's preamble and 11 articles
including the declaration of rights, the distribution of powers,
the executive department, elections, impeachments, the judicial
department, state and county officers, militia, disqualification,
oaths, bribery of electors, new counties, and miscellaneous
provisions.
Also included are an annotated bibliography of Tennessee
constitutional history including references to pre-statehood
compacts, the constitutions of 1796 and 1835, the Civil War,
Reconstruction and the 1865 amendments, the constitution of 1870,
attempted constitutional reform, and five constitutional
conventions from 1953 to 1977. A table of cases completes this
unsurpassed reference guide that will be referred to and relied
upon by constitutional scholars and students as well as legal
historians. Previously published by Greenwood, this title has been
brought back in to circulation by Oxford University Press with new
verve. Re-printed with standardization of content organization in
order to facilitate research across the series, this title, as with
all titles in the series, is set to join the dynamic revision cycle
of The Oxford Commentaries on the StateConstitutions of the United
States.
The Oxford Commentaries on the State Constitutions of the United
States is an important series that reflects a renewed international
interest in constitutional history and provides expert insight into
each of the 50 state constitutions. Each volume in this innovative
series contains a historical overview of the state's constitutional
development, a section-by-section analysis of its current
constitution, and a comprehensive guide to further research.
Under the expert editorship ofProfessor G. Alan Tarr, Director of
the Center on State Constitutional Studies at Rutgers University,
this series provides essential reference tools for understanding
state constitutional law. Books in the series can be purchased
individually or as part of a complete set, giving readers unmatched
access to these important political documents.
This work documents the lives, crimes and deaths of 487 people,
including nine women, who were legally executed on Tennessee soil.
These include horse stealers, slaves, wife killers, cop killers and
rapists. The book includes fascinating cultural details such as
gallows sermons preached at public hangings held before 1883.
Issues of crowd control, race mixing, and denunciations of
witnesses by the condemned caused Tennessee's move to
quasi-private, and finally private, ones at the Main Prison in
1909. Tennessee is unique because it witnessed both Union and
Confederate legal executions during the Civil War, mostly of
deserters. The book is the only compilation of those episodes.
Built on the famous Espy list of United States executions, it
includes 154 previously undocumented cases. A discussion of
dramatic changes in Tennessee death penalty law during 1960-2000, a
hiatus period, is included and covers the complicated appellate
procedures used by the six men executed since 2000, some of whom
had been on death row for more than twenty years.
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