With the American government currently fighting a "new kind of war," debate concerning the curtailing of civil liberties while the war is being fought is not without historical precedent. Examples include the internment of Japanese-Americans during the Second World War and the arrests of anti-war radicals such as Socialist leader Eugene Debs during the First World War. In those examples, the Supreme Court acquiesced with the policies implemented by the other two branches of the government. During the Civil War, however, the high court ruled against the Lincoln Administration's most egregious violation of civil liberties: the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. Regardless of the Supreme Court's opposition, and the opposition of a large ...
In February 1863, Congress considered a bill to create for the first-time conscription at the nation...
Shortly after John Wilkes Booth killed Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865, President Andrew Johnson d...
As many jurists and scholars have noted, the United States has a long-standing history of encroachin...
During their presidencies, Abraham Lincoln and George W. Bush both suspended the writ of habeas corp...
During the American Civil War, President Lincoln and his Administration suspended the right to a jur...
Executive war powers are embedded in the United States Constitution.The circumstances in which they ...
A suspension of the writ of habeas corpus empowers the President to indefinitely detain those suspec...
The issue of the proper scope of the federal writ of habeas corpus has for the past several decades ...
This study examines judicial conflicts caused by habeas corpus from the formation of the Constitutio...
The Writ of Habeas Corpus is one of the foremost rights entrenched in the Common Law System. However...
The habeas corpus provision in the United States Constitution, known as the Suspension Clause, has l...
In the aftermath of the Civil War, state judges lost their long-held right to inquire into the lega...
In May 1861, President Abraham Lincoln\u27s decision to suspend habeas corpus in Baltimore following...
At the outbreak of the Civil War the Federal military arrested certain people whose loyalty was susp...
The Civil War was widely recognized, at the time and since, as a moment of popular constitutionalism...
In February 1863, Congress considered a bill to create for the first-time conscription at the nation...
Shortly after John Wilkes Booth killed Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865, President Andrew Johnson d...
As many jurists and scholars have noted, the United States has a long-standing history of encroachin...
During their presidencies, Abraham Lincoln and George W. Bush both suspended the writ of habeas corp...
During the American Civil War, President Lincoln and his Administration suspended the right to a jur...
Executive war powers are embedded in the United States Constitution.The circumstances in which they ...
A suspension of the writ of habeas corpus empowers the President to indefinitely detain those suspec...
The issue of the proper scope of the federal writ of habeas corpus has for the past several decades ...
This study examines judicial conflicts caused by habeas corpus from the formation of the Constitutio...
The Writ of Habeas Corpus is one of the foremost rights entrenched in the Common Law System. However...
The habeas corpus provision in the United States Constitution, known as the Suspension Clause, has l...
In the aftermath of the Civil War, state judges lost their long-held right to inquire into the lega...
In May 1861, President Abraham Lincoln\u27s decision to suspend habeas corpus in Baltimore following...
At the outbreak of the Civil War the Federal military arrested certain people whose loyalty was susp...
The Civil War was widely recognized, at the time and since, as a moment of popular constitutionalism...
In February 1863, Congress considered a bill to create for the first-time conscription at the nation...
Shortly after John Wilkes Booth killed Abraham Lincoln on April 14, 1865, President Andrew Johnson d...
As many jurists and scholars have noted, the United States has a long-standing history of encroachin...