The Constitution in ConflictLincoln was not alone in believing that the Constitution could be interpreted by any of the three branches of the government. Today, however, the Supreme Court's role as the ultimate arbiter of constitutional matters is widely accepted. But as Robert Burt shows in his provocative new book, this was not always the case, nor should it be. In a remarkably innovative reconstruction of constitutional history, Burt traces the controversy over judicial supremacy back to the founding fathers, with Madison and Hamilton as the principal antagonists. The conflicting views these founders espoused--equal interpretive powers among the federal branches on one hand and judicial supremacy on the other--remain plausible readings of "original intent" and so continue to present us with a choice. Drawing extensively on Lincoln's conception of political equality, Burt argues convincingly that judicial supremacy and majority rule are both inconsistent with the egalitarian democratic ideal. The proper task of the judiciary, he contends--as epitomized in Brown v. Board of Education--is to actively protect minorities against "enslaving" legislative defeats while, at the same time, to refrain from awarding conclusive "victory" to these minorities against their adversaries. From this premise, Burt goes on to examine key decisions such as Roe v. Wade, U.S. v. Nixon, and the death penalty cases, all of which demonstrate how the Court has fallen away from egalitarian jurisprudence and returned to an essentially authoritarian conception of its role. With an eye to the urgent issues at stake in these cases, Burt identifies the alternative results that an egalitarian conception of judicial authority would dictate. Thefirst fully articulated presentation of the Constitution as a communally interpreted document in which the Supreme Court plays an important, but not predominant, role, The Constitution in Conflict has dramatic implications for both the theory and the practice of constitutional law. |
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Halaman 155
The core premise of these subjugative assumptions was the inevitability of
irreconcilable hostility . In the early colonial era , relentless hostility had been
acknowledged in relations first between whites and Indians and then between
whites and ...
The core premise of these subjugative assumptions was the inevitability of
irreconcilable hostility . In the early colonial era , relentless hostility had been
acknowledged in relations first between whites and Indians and then between
whites and ...
Halaman 327
By its intervention in the impeachment process , moreover , the Court aborted the
possibility that the Congress might reassert the primacy of the equality principle
in our governance by condemning President Nixon for his subjugative ...
By its intervention in the impeachment process , moreover , the Court aborted the
possibility that the Congress might reassert the primacy of the equality principle
in our governance by condemning President Nixon for his subjugative ...
Halaman 328
If the principle requires that adversaries treat one another as equals , then a
wrongful subjugative aggression by one must be met by a constrained defensive
response — a response that visibly demands nothing more than a restoration of ...
If the principle requires that adversaries treat one another as equals , then a
wrongful subjugative aggression by one must be met by a constrained defensive
response — a response that visibly demands nothing more than a restoration of ...
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White Bosses | 1 |
The Constitutional Question | 9 |
Madisons Institutional Answer | 34 |
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Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
The Constitution in Conflict Robert A. Burt,Alexander M Bickel Professor of Law Robert A Burt Pratinjau terbatas - 1992 |
The Constitution in Conflict Robert A. Burt,Alexander M Bickel Professor of Law Robert A Burt Tampilan cuplikan - 1992 |
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