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The Oxford Handbook of the U.S. Constitution

Online ISBN:
9780190245788
Print ISBN:
9780190245757
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Oxford Handbook of the U.S. Constitution

Mark Tushnet (ed.),
Mark Tushnet
(ed.)
Law, Harvard Law School
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William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law, Emeritus, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, United States

Mark A. Graber (ed.),
Mark A. Graber
(ed.)
Law and Government, University of Maryland, College Park
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Mark A. Graber is Professor of Law and Government at the University of Maryland School of Law and the University of Maryland, College Park.

Sanford Levinson (ed.)
Sanford Levinson
(ed.)
Law, The University of Texas at Austin
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The University of Texas at Austin

Published online:
12 November 2015
Published in print:
1 October 2015
Online ISBN:
9780190245788
Print ISBN:
9780190245757
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

This book provides a comprehensive guide to the United States Constitution. It examines constitutional developments based on a periodization scheme that partly reflects important changes in constitutional governance, from the Jacksonian Era to the beginning of the 1980s. The book’s general historical institutionalist orientation blurs precise distinctions between political science and law, with particular reference to the role of political parties, interest groups, and bureaucrats in operating a constitution designed to prevent the rise of parties, interest-group politics, and an entrenched bureaucracy. The book also considers exertions of power by the Supreme Court, along with the national executive and Congress. There are chapters on federalism as well as liberty, property, religion, free expression and free press, criminal procedure, habeas corpus, and the right to bear arms. In addition, the book discusses Native Americans, race, gender, and citizenship to illustrate contemporary constitutional struggles for equality; the constitutional status of international law, constitutionalism, and constitutional authority; and how, at a time of increasing globalization, people living in the United States can continue to be governed by a constitution meant for a society greatly separated from the rest of the “civilized world.”

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