In several landmark decisions during the mid-1920s, the U.S. Supreme Court significantly expanded the scope of the Constitution's protection of individual freedom by striking down state laws designed to repress or even destroy privateøand parochial schools. Forging New Freedoms explains the origins of na-tivistic hostility toward German and Japanese Americans, Roman Catholics, Lutherans, and other groups whose schools became the object of assaults during and shortly after World War I. The book explores the campaigns to restrict foreign language instruction and to require compulsory public education. It also examines the background of Meyer v. Nebraska and Farrington v. Tokushige, in which the Court invalidated laws that restricted the teaching of foreign languages, and Pierce v. Society of Sisters, which nullified an Oregon law that required all children to attend public elementary schools. Drawing upon diverse sources, including popular periodicals, court briefs, and unpublished manuscripts, William G. Ross explains how the Court's decisions commenced the Court's modern role as a guardian of civil liberties. He also traces the constitutional legacy of those decisions, which have provided the foundation for the controversial right of privacy. Ross's interdisciplinary exploration of the complex interaction among ethnic and religious institutions, nativist groups, public opinion, the legislative process, and judicial decision-making provides fresh insights into both the fragility and the resilience of civil liberties in the United States. While the campaigns to curtail nonpublic education offer a potent reminder of the ever-present dangers of majoritarian tyranny, the refusal of voters and legislators to exact more extreme measures was a tribute to the tolerance of American society. The Court's decisions provided notable examples of how the judiciary can pro-tect embattled minorities who are willing to fight to protect their rights.
First , a large majority of the names chosen were familiar English names such as Alexander , Bennett , Carpenter , Jackson , Johnson , Moore , Morgan , Richards , Roberts , Taylor , and Turner . To some extent these choices may have ...
Anna Fournier challenges this view, investigating what is increasingly recognized as a critical aspect of contemporary global rights discourse: the active involvement of young people living in societies undergoing radical change.
In this deeply researched social history, Amrita Chakrabarti Myers analyzes the ways in which black women in Charleston acquired, de In this deeply researched social history, Myers analyzes the ways in which black women in Charleston ...
Jaap Penraat can't understand the Germans' hatred of his Jewish neighbors in his hometown of Amsterdam.
A considerable amount of time would pass before the rear lines of the physical war against slavery were as battle ready as the front lines. That task's completion meant bringing to an end the second phase in building a powerful ...
Bringing together an impressive range of scholars from the field of Cuban studies, the volume examines, for the first time, the continuities between disparate forms of political struggle and racial organizing during the early years of the ...
Our contributors hail from across the globe, united in the idea that freedom is the right state of man. It is something that must be preserved, fought for, and won. And when it lost, freedom is something that must be forged once again.
See also Klinkner and Smith , The Unsteady March , 144-5 ; Lichtenstein , State of the Union , 73 ; Plummer , Rising Wind , 67-9 . 226 A. S. Beck Shoe Corporation v .
control, prison reform,and personallaw.69 The government as guardian drew upon expertisein new formsof knowledge,70 based on ... Ideasof citizenship, forged in the freedom struggle's “crucible of cultural politics,”75 informed the ...
"This book will explore the political, economic, and social forces that generated such rapid changes in traditional understandings of the constitutional relationships between the federal and state governments and their citizens"--