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| Genre/Form: | Biography |
|---|---|
| Named Person: | Earl Warren; Earl Warren |
| Material Type: | Biography, Internet resource |
| Document Type: | Book, Internet Resource |
| All Authors / Contributors: |
Harry N Scheiber |
| ISBN: | 9780739116340 0739116347 9780739116357 0739116355 |
| OCLC Number: | 71189853 |
| Description: | xii, 368 p. ; 24 cm. |
| Contents: | The Warren Court, American law, and modern legal cultures / Harry N. Scheiber -- The black basis of constitutional development / Malcolm M. Feeley -- Race, agency, and equal protection : a retrospective on the Warren Court / Sheila Foster -- How Earl Warren's twenty-two years in law enforcement affected his work as Chief Justice / Yale Kamisar -- Corliss Lamont and the postmaster general : a synecdoche for the First Amendment in the era of the Warren Court (1953-1969) / William van Alstyne -- The early hours of the Post-World War II model of constitutional federalism : The Warren Court and the world / Vicki C. Jackson -- The Warren Court and Congress / Gordon Silverstein -- Avoiding constitutional questions in the early Warren Court : judicial craftsmanship and statutory interpretation / Philip P. Frickey -- The seduction of judicially triggered social transformation : the impact of the Warren Court in Latin America / Javier A. Couso -- The Warren Court in East Asia : an essay in comparative law / Thomas Ginsburg -- The impact of the Warren Court in Canada : a view from the trenches / Edward Greenspan -- Political hero, legal dwarf? the impact of the Warren Court in Europe / Eivind Smith -- An American dilemma and the Scandinavian dream : the citizen Meets Modernity and the Strong Nation-State : a study in comparative legal cultures / Kjell Åke Modéer. |
| Responsibility: | edited by Harry N. Scheiber. |
| More information: |
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
Much print has been spilled about the Warren Court "revolution," but this collection of essays is very much worth reading. It compiles the wisdom of an unusually diverse and talented group of legal writers, and it provides unique perspectives on the impact of the Warren Court abroad. Earl Warren and the Warren Court is an important contribution to the literature on the modern Supreme Court of the United States. -- Stanley N. Katz, Director, Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies, Woodrow Wilson School This is an unusually fine and unhackneyed collection of essays on the work of the United States Supreme Court during the Earl Warren years, and the significance of that work for society and for the legal order. The chapters on the influence of Warren and his court outside the United States are an unusual and fascinating feature of this collection. -- Lawrence M. Friedman, Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor of Law, Stanford Law School These essays add up to a searching reappraisal of the Warren Court. While fully appreciating the great contributions of that Court to fair and equal treatment of America's minorities and pariahs, the authors also look with a clear and critical eye on theCourt's limitations and failures. They challenge the common view that the Warren Court was radically activist, showing that although the Court took the lead on many issues of civil rights and liberties, it worked alongside Congress and the executive andwas cautious in challenging strongly held public opinions, though often naive in failing to foresee how hostile public reactions to its decisions would be. The most original and fascinating chapters look at the reception of the Warren Court's work in foreign countries and legal cultures. Some foreign lawyers saw the Warren Court as a model of what judges should not do, political rather than legal decision-making. But many took inspiration from the Court's work to embolden constitutional review, public-interest law, and the protection of human rights in their own countries. These essays are thoughtful, reflective, and often startlingly novel work of high quality. They are a both a fine introduction to the Warren Court and a fresh source of new insight -- Robert W. Gordon, Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and Legal History, Yale Law School Recommended. CHOICE The contributors to this collection take what has become in some ways a rather static discussion about the history of the Warren Court and open it up in illuminating, analytically powerful ways. H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online Almost 40 years after Chief Justice Earl Warren retired, the Court that bears his name remains influential. This volume grew from a 2004 conference at Warren's alma mater, the University of California, Berkley; it complements Jim Newton's biography of Warren,Justice for All (2006), and Ed Cray'sChief Justice: A Biography of Earl Warren (1997) by focusing less on Warren than on the Court that he led. Many legal heavy hitters, mostly law professors, contributed to the volume, which features an introduction, 13 chapters, and a brief afterword. Summing Up: Recommended for all readership levels. CHOICE These essays add up to a searching reappraisal of the Warren Court. While fully appreciating the great contributions of that Court to fair and equal treatment of America's minorities and pariahs, the authors also look with a clear and critical eye on the Court's limitations and failures. They challenge the common view that the Warren Court was radically "activist", showing that although the Court took the lead on many issues of civil rights and liberties, it worked alongside Congress and the executive and was cautious in challenging strongly held public opinions, though often naive in failing to foresee how hostile public reactions to its decisions would be. The most original and fascinating chapters look at the reception of the Warren Court's work in foreign countries and legal cultures. Some foreign lawyers saw the Warren Court as a model of what judges should not do, "political" rather than "legal" decision-making. But many took inspiration from the Court's work to embolden constitutional review, public-interest law, and the protection of human rights in their own countries. These essays are thoughtful, reflective, and often startlingly novel work of high quality. They are a both a fine introduction to the Warren Court and a fresh source of new insight for those who think they know the subject well. -- Robert W. Gordon, Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and Legal History, Yale Law School Read more...

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Related Subjects:(8)
- Warren, Earl, -- 1891-1974.
- Judges -- United States -- Biography.
- Political questions and judicial power -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Civil rights.
- Warren, Earl.
- Oberster Gerichtshof.
- Verfassungsrecht.
- USA.
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