Justice in Plainclothes
eBook - PDF

Justice in Plainclothes

A Theory of American Constitutional Practice

  1. 272 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Justice in Plainclothes

A Theory of American Constitutional Practice

About this book

In this important book, Lawrence Sager, a leading constitutional theorist, offers a lucid understanding and compelling defense of American constitutional practice. Sager treats judges as active partners in the enterprise of securing the fundamentals of political justice, and sees the process of constitutional adjudication as a promising and distinctly democratic addition to that enterprise. But his embrace of the constitutional judiciary is not unqualified. Judges in Sager’s view should and do stop short of enforcing the whole of the Constitution; and the Supreme Court should welcome rather than condemn the efforts of Congress to pick up the slack.

Among the surprising fruits of this justice-seeking account of American constitutional practice are a persuasive case for the constitutional right to secure a materially decent life and sympathy for the obduracy of the Constitution to amendment. No book can end debate in this conceptually tumultuous area; but Justice in Plainclothes is likely to help shape the ongoing debate for years to come.

Lawrence G. Sager holds the Alice Jane Drysdale Sheffield Regents Chair in Law, University of Texas at Austin.

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Yes, you can access Justice in Plainclothes by Lawrence G. Sager in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Law & Public Law. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2008
eBook ISBN
9780300129199
Edition
1
Topic
Law
Subtopic
Public Law
Index
Law

Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Acknowledgments
  3. Introduction. The Puzzle of Our Constitutional Practice
  4. Chapter 1. Accounts of Our Constitutional Practice
  5. Chapter 2. Judges as Agents of the Past: The Burdens of Originalism
  6. Chapter 3. Enactment-Centered History as an Originalist Supplementation of the Text
  7. Chapter 4. Three Rescue Attempts: Lean, Middling, and Thick
  8. Chapter 5. Enter Partnership: The Justice-Seeking Account of Our Constitutional Practice
  9. Chapter 6. The Thinness of Constitutional Law and the Underenforcement Thesis
  10. Chapter 7. The Conceptual Salience of Underenforcement
  11. Chapter 8. The Domain of Constitutional Justice
  12. Chapter 9. The Birth Logic of a Democratic Constitution
  13. Chapter 10. Democracy and the Justice-Seeking Constitution
  14. Conclusion
  15. Notes
  16. Index