Read The Constitution in 2020 by Oxford University Press Online
[Oxford University Press] Ä The Constitution in 2020 ↠ Download Online eBook or Kindle ePUB. The Constitution in 2020 Featuring some of America's finest legal minds--Cass Sunstein, Bruce Ackerman, Robert Post, Harold Koh, Larry Kramer, Noah Feldman, Pam Karlan, William Eskridge, Mark Tushnet, Yochai Benkler and Richard Ford, among others--the book tackles a wide range of issues, including the challenge of new technologies, presidential power, international human rights, religious liberty, freedom of speech, voting, reproductive rights, and economic rights. The Constitution in 2020 is a powerful bluepri
Title | : | The Constitution in 2020 |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.69 (779 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0195387961 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 368 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2017-10-02 |
Language | : | English |
Featuring some of America's finest legal minds--Cass Sunstein, Bruce Ackerman, Robert Post, Harold Koh, Larry Kramer, Noah Feldman, Pam Karlan, William Eskridge, Mark Tushnet, Yochai Benkler and Richard Ford, among others--the book tackles a wide range of issues, including the challenge of new technologies, presidential power, international human rights, religious liberty, freedom of speech, voting, reproductive rights, and economic rights. The Constitution in 2020 is a powerful blueprint for implementing a more progressive vision of constitutional law in the years ahead. The Constitution in 2020 calls on liberals to articulate their constitutional vision in a way that can command the confidence of ordinary Americans.. Edited by two of America's leading constitutional scholars, the book provides a new framework for addressing the most important constitutional issues of the future in clear, accessible language
This collection would be a valuable addition to a suggested reading list for constitutional law classes. Constitutional progressives who read this book's veritable cornucopia of carefully conceived alternatives are bound to be energizes by the vistas opened here--and challenged by the puzzles poster in every sparkling chapter."--Laurence H. High school students in advanced placement US government and politics classes might be encouraged to read a few of the essays. Law librarians should at least skim through this book, too. This volume marks the end of that time in the wilderness. Tribe, University Professor, Harvard Law School, and author of The Invisible Constitution. "It is clear that no talent was spared in the construction of Balkin and S
Professor Balkin teaches and writes in the areas of constitutional law, telecommunications and Internet law, first amendment law, cultural and social theory, and jurisprudence. Balkin is Knight Professor of Constitutional Law and the First Amendment at Yale Law School, and the Founder and Director of Yale's Information Society Project, an inter
Mixed, sometimes biased scholarship Arnold This book's premise is interesting - gather the country's top liberal constitutional law experts and write a book (originally a conference) on how progressives would interpret the Constitution. I consider myself somewhat a progressive budding comparative constitutional law scholar, so the book fit some of my ideological biases. However, I'm much more concerned about good scholarship and sound arguments, and in that respect this book didn't meet my expectations. I found some of the articles too short to really address the topic at hand, and . Glenn C. Zorn said Too far left even for a liberal democrat. I consider myself a liberal democrat, but the tenor of this book is really almost leftist, so it didn't really appeal to me. I had to get it for a class, I wouldn't have bought it if it wasn't required reading.. MIKE from NY said Leftist propaganda!. The only objective description of this book is as leftist political propaganda. Leftists view the Court as a nine person super-legislature, the prime function of which is to impose what they view as, fairness, compassion and “justice” (in its most amorphous sense) on an American society that is just too dumb to know better. In this progressive utopian fantasyland, the Court has virtually unchecked power to “interpret” the Constitution, however it sees fit, in order to meet the necessities of the time. A more dangerou
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