TY - BOOK ID - 1323815 TI - The Constitution in the Supreme Court : The Second Century, 1888-1986 PY - 2015 SN - 0226131114 9780226222561 022622256X 9780226131115 0226131122 PB - Chicago : University of Chicago Press, DB - UniCat KW - Public law. Constitutional law KW - Law of civil procedure KW - United States KW - Constitutional history KW - Constitutional law KW - Interpretation and construction KW - United States. Supreme Court KW - -Constitutional law KW - -#KVHA:Recht; Verenigde Staten KW - #KVHA:American Studies KW - Constitutional limitations KW - Constitutionalism KW - Constitutions KW - Limitations, Constitutional KW - Public law KW - Administrative law KW - Constitutional history, Modern KW - History KW - United States. KW - Supreme Court (U.S.) KW - Chief Justice of the United States KW - Supreme Court of the United States KW - 美國. KW - constitution, supreme court, judicial system, law, legal, chief justice, fuller, burger, industrial revolution, regulation, civil rights, liberty, freedom, constitutional exegesis, opinion writing, spending programs, contract clause, federal power, economic interests, interstate commerce, full faith and credit, enumerated powers, equality, property, expression, search seizure, prohibition, new deal, nonfiction, history, political science, politics, white primaries, juries, dissent, religion, treason, draft, internment camps, war. KW - United States of America KW - -United States. Supreme Court UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:1323815 AB - The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The Second Century traces the development of the Supreme Court from Chief Justice Fuller (1888-1910) to the retirement of Chief Justice Burger (1969-1986). Currie argues that the Court's work in its second century revolved around two issues: the constitutionality of the regulatory and spending programs adopted to ameliorate the hardships caused by the Industrial Revolution and the need to protect civil rights and liberties. Organizing the cases around the tenure of specific chief justices, Currie distinguishes among the different methods of constitutional exegesis, analyzes the various techniques of opinion writing, and evaluates the legal performance of different Courts. "Elegant and readable. Whether you are in favor of judicial restraint or judicial activism, whatever your feelings about the Warren Court, or the Renquist Court, this is a book that justifies serious study."-Robert Stevens, New York Times Book Review ER -