We the judges studies in American and Indian constitutional law from Marshall to Mukherjea
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Type
Book
Authors
Category
American Law
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Publication Year
1956
Publisher
Pages
480 pages
Subject
American Constitutional Law
Abstract
"The United States has had fourteen Chief Justices, John Marshall being the fourth and Earl Warren the fourteenth. The growth of American constitutional law, therefore, antedates Marshall. But many of the main currents that are felt to this day started with him. So it is that he is the one with whom we Americans identify the origin of our basic constitutional doctrines. The span from Marshall who started his service in 1801..." - Foreword
Description
Content:
Foreword
The American and Indian Experiments
The judicial power
The dual system of courts
Legislative prerogatives
The administrative agency
The commerce clause: its reach and its limitations
The commerce clause: Federal vs. State power
The reach of due process
The fundamental rights of speech, press and religion
The right to a fair trial
Equal protection
The judiciary
Index of cases
General index
Foreword
The American and Indian Experiments
The judicial power
The dual system of courts
Legislative prerogatives
The administrative agency
The commerce clause: its reach and its limitations
The commerce clause: Federal vs. State power
The reach of due process
The fundamental rights of speech, press and religion
The right to a fair trial
Equal protection
The judiciary
Index of cases
General index
Number of Copies
1
Library | Accession‎ No | Call No | Copy No | Edition | Location | Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Main | 2588 | USA CON DOUGLAS 1956 | 1 | Yes |