Let Us Now Praise Practical MenBenjamin Curtis and he Dangers of Principled Pragmatism Benjamin Curtis served on the U.S. Supreme Court from 1851 to 1857, and was intellectually active during a time of intense and widespread debate about the meaning of various Constitutional provisions, an...
Tocqueville was the first to notice that political controversy in America tends to become legal cont...
In the decade after the Civil War, the task of defining the rights of state and national citizenship...
The complete history of the Lincoln-Douglas debates provides additional support for the main thesis ...
In the Dred Scott case, the United States Supreme Court ruled that no black, whether slave or free, ...
The Civil War was widely recognized, at the time and since, as a moment of popular constitutionalism...
Review of: Justice of Shattered Dreams: Samuel Freeman Miller and the Supreme Court during the Civil...
Trials and Tribulations Two Books offers insight into court cases From the Compromise of 1850 thro...
Until the advent of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, the masterful and magnetic figure of Chief Justic...
Transforming the Constitution: A Multidisciplinary Study Victory of Law is a dense, important, and...
The dissenting opinion of Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis in Dred Scott has generally received lavis...
Daniel Farber, Lincoln\u27s Constitution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003. Pp. 256. $27.5...
It has often been said that judicial review is a necessary ingredient in a federated system, for sup...
In 1978, the historian Richard Cobb published a short book, entitled Death in Paris, about the 400 o...
In the first of three articles, distinguished political scientist Carl B. Swisher discusses the role...
This essay synthesizes recent writing on the constitutional history of slavery, featuring Mark Grabe...
Tocqueville was the first to notice that political controversy in America tends to become legal cont...
In the decade after the Civil War, the task of defining the rights of state and national citizenship...
The complete history of the Lincoln-Douglas debates provides additional support for the main thesis ...
In the Dred Scott case, the United States Supreme Court ruled that no black, whether slave or free, ...
The Civil War was widely recognized, at the time and since, as a moment of popular constitutionalism...
Review of: Justice of Shattered Dreams: Samuel Freeman Miller and the Supreme Court during the Civil...
Trials and Tribulations Two Books offers insight into court cases From the Compromise of 1850 thro...
Until the advent of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, the masterful and magnetic figure of Chief Justic...
Transforming the Constitution: A Multidisciplinary Study Victory of Law is a dense, important, and...
The dissenting opinion of Justice Benjamin Robbins Curtis in Dred Scott has generally received lavis...
Daniel Farber, Lincoln\u27s Constitution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003. Pp. 256. $27.5...
It has often been said that judicial review is a necessary ingredient in a federated system, for sup...
In 1978, the historian Richard Cobb published a short book, entitled Death in Paris, about the 400 o...
In the first of three articles, distinguished political scientist Carl B. Swisher discusses the role...
This essay synthesizes recent writing on the constitutional history of slavery, featuring Mark Grabe...
Tocqueville was the first to notice that political controversy in America tends to become legal cont...
In the decade after the Civil War, the task of defining the rights of state and national citizenship...
The complete history of the Lincoln-Douglas debates provides additional support for the main thesis ...