American constitutional lawyers and legal historians routinely assert that the Supreme Court's state action doctrine halted Reconstruction in its tracks. But it didn't. Rethinking the Judicial Settlement of Reconstruction demolishes the conventional wisdom - and puts a constructive alternative in its place. Pamela Brandwein unveils a lost jurisprudence of rights that provided expansive possibilities for protecting blacks' physical safety and electoral participation, even as it left public accommodation rights undefended. She shows that the Supreme Court supported a Republican coalition and left open ample room for executive and legislative action. Blacks were abandoned, but by the president and Congress, not the Court. Brandwein unites close legal reading of judicial opinions (some hitherto unknown), sustained historical work, the study of political institutions, and the sociology of knowledge. This book explodes tired old debates and will provoke new ones.
' Brandwein forces us to pay more attention to the ways in which the reconstruction of history (in this case, the history of Reconstruction) becomes a vital resource in contemporary constitutional politics.
This landmark work of Constitutional and legal history is the leading account of the ways in which federal judges, attorneys, and other law officers defined a new era of civil and political rights in the South and implemented the ...
105 Cooley drew from Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw's opinion in Roberts v. Boston.106 In Roberts, Shaw interpreted the Massachusetts Constitution's declaration that “[a]ll men are born free and equal” to mean “only that the rights of all, ...
Richardson, 41–52; Foner, 275–80, 307–9; Valelly, 3; Downs, After Appomattox, 162–65, 168–74, 178. 46. Downs, After Appomattox, 193, 195; Trefousse, 264–65; Hahn, 177–89; Michael Kazin, American Dreamers: How the Left Changed a Nation ...
See generally William W. Freehling , Prelude to Civil War : The Nullification Controversy in South Carolina , 1816-1836 ( New York : Harper and Row , 1965 ) . For a discussion of the standoff , see id . at 260-297 .
Michael E. Shay, Revered Commander, Maligned General: The Life of Clarence Ransom Edwards, 1859–1931 (Columbia, MO, 2011), 1–57; Edward M. Coffman, Review, Journal of Military History 75 (July 2011): 945–946; Walter L. Williams, ...
Using these controversies as a point of departure, Rethinking the Reasonable Person examines the promise andthe perils of the reasonable person standard. Ultimately, it argues that an objective standard is not only defensible but essential.
The Multiple Traditions in America,” Americanist Rogers Smith postulated there are contradictory trends of liberalism and illiberalism operating concurrently in American political culture.72 As critical as Smith is of liberalism, ...
This book explains the politics behind the design of the U.S. Constitution. James Madison diagnosed the nation's problems and proposed a much stronger national government to remedy them, which was...
Douglas L. Wilson and Rodney O. Davis (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1998), 453–58 (quotation 453); Lincoln to Speed, ... ''Moving a Plantation to Louisiana,'' Louisiana Studies 6 (Fall 1967): 279–89, and David O. Whitten, ...