The purpose of this article is to demonstrate that the Supreme Court has embraced Abraham Lincoln’s transcendent understanding of the principles of liberty and equality – transcendent in the sense that these principles are considered to be timeless, universal, and morally binding. The article briefly summarizes the Transcendental Movement, sets forth Lincoln’s understanding of liberty and equality, and describes how, in the modern era, the Supreme Court has “constantly approximated” the principles that Lincoln believed that this country is dedicated to
This Article explores how the great black abolitionist Frederick Douglass was both a constitutional ...
This Foreword introduces the article to follow written by Harry V. Jaffa, scholar of Abraham Lincoln...
On the afternoon of January 1,1863, following nearly two years of bloody civil war, Abraham Lincoln ...
These introductory remarks to the Inaugural Abraham Lincoln Lecture on Constitutional Law were deliv...
Liberty and Justice Scholar dissects Fundamental Problem There is a sort of Fundamental Problem of...
Daniel Farber, Lincoln\u27s Constitution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003. Pp. 256. $27.5...
Some invoke the legacy of Abraham Lincoln to justify largely unchecked executive power which in time...
As we confront the challenges of the War on Terrorism, it is useful to look back at our own histor...
Lincoln the Final Founder Scholars have ranked Abraham Lincoln highest among all United States pres...
Abraham Lincoln understood judicial activism. For Lincoln, the paradigm of the unrestrained Supreme ...
Dr. Huebner speaks on the way that Lincoln struggled with, and found ways to surmount, three major c...
George Anastaplo began his career in an unusual fashion. He was a victim of the Illinois Bar Associa...
Lincoln’s Constitutionalism In this splendid little book, Christian G. Samito surveys Lincoln’s even...
Looking at the political thought of Abraham Lincoln, two major themes arise: slavery and racial equa...
Noah Feldman’s The Broken Constitution is the case-in-chief for his proposition that President Abrah...
This Article explores how the great black abolitionist Frederick Douglass was both a constitutional ...
This Foreword introduces the article to follow written by Harry V. Jaffa, scholar of Abraham Lincoln...
On the afternoon of January 1,1863, following nearly two years of bloody civil war, Abraham Lincoln ...
These introductory remarks to the Inaugural Abraham Lincoln Lecture on Constitutional Law were deliv...
Liberty and Justice Scholar dissects Fundamental Problem There is a sort of Fundamental Problem of...
Daniel Farber, Lincoln\u27s Constitution. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003. Pp. 256. $27.5...
Some invoke the legacy of Abraham Lincoln to justify largely unchecked executive power which in time...
As we confront the challenges of the War on Terrorism, it is useful to look back at our own histor...
Lincoln the Final Founder Scholars have ranked Abraham Lincoln highest among all United States pres...
Abraham Lincoln understood judicial activism. For Lincoln, the paradigm of the unrestrained Supreme ...
Dr. Huebner speaks on the way that Lincoln struggled with, and found ways to surmount, three major c...
George Anastaplo began his career in an unusual fashion. He was a victim of the Illinois Bar Associa...
Lincoln’s Constitutionalism In this splendid little book, Christian G. Samito surveys Lincoln’s even...
Looking at the political thought of Abraham Lincoln, two major themes arise: slavery and racial equa...
Noah Feldman’s The Broken Constitution is the case-in-chief for his proposition that President Abrah...
This Article explores how the great black abolitionist Frederick Douglass was both a constitutional ...
This Foreword introduces the article to follow written by Harry V. Jaffa, scholar of Abraham Lincoln...
On the afternoon of January 1,1863, following nearly two years of bloody civil war, Abraham Lincoln ...