Symposium on Chief Justice John Marshall and the United States Supreme Court, 1801-1835

Type
Book
Authors
 
Category
American Law  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
2000 
Publisher
John Marshall Law Review, United States 
Volume
33 
Issue Type
Issue Period
Summer 2000 
Pages
1202 pages 
Subject
American Biography 
Abstract
"Though over one hundred and sixty-five years have elapsed since his death on July 5, 1835, John Marshall continues to occupy an eminent place in American constitutional law." - Amazon 
Description
Contents:
Dedication
Foreword
Chief Justice John Marshall and the course of American Constitutional history
Recovering the World of the Marshall court
Editing Marshall
John Marshall, McCulloch v. Maryland, and the Southern states' rights tradition
Classical legal naturalism and the politics of John Marshall's constitutional jurisprudence
Text and principle in John Marshall's constitutional law: the cases of Marbury and McCulloch
The Marsha;; court and property rights: a reappraisal
Judicial institutions in emerging federal systems The Marshall court and the European court of justice
Marshall misconstrued: Activist? Partisan? Reactionary?
Commentaries
John Marshall in Spencer Roane's
Virginia: The southern constitutional opposition to the Marshal Court
Comments on Clinton: reconsidering the role of natural law in John Marshall's jurisprudence
Chief Justice Marshall as modern
Marbury, MuCulloch, Gore and Bush: a comment on Sylvia Snowiss
Rebalancing professor Ely's Reappraisal of the Marshall Court and property rights
Property rights in John Marshall's Virginia: The case of Crenshaw and Crenshaw v. Slate River Company
John Marshall and Indian Nations in the beginning and now
The Marshall court and the European court of justice
 
Biblio Notes
Cover title.
Issued as: Vol. 33, no. 4, summer 2000 of The John Marshall law review.  
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