To Secure These Rights: The Declaration of Independence and Constitutional Interpretation

Capa
NYU Press, 01/06/1995 - 334 páginas

A legal scholar puts forward a rigorous and provocative theory of constitutional interpretation that cuts across today’s partisan divide.

To Secure These Rights enters the fascinating—and often contentious—debate over constitutional interpretation. Scott Douglas Gerber argues that the Constitution of the United States should be interpreted in light of the natural rights political philosophy of the Declaration of Independence and that the Supreme Court is the institution of American government that should be primarily responsible for identifying and applying that philosophy in American life.

Importantly, the theory advanced in this book—what Gerber calls liberal originalism—is neither consistently liberal nor consistently conservative in the modern conception of those terms. Rather, the theory is liberal in the classic sense of viewing the basic purpose of government to be safeguarding the natural rights of individuals. 

As Thomas Jefferson wrote in the Declaration of Independence, to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men. In essence, Gerber maintains that the Declaration articulates the philosophical ends of our nation, and that the Constitution embodies the means to effectuate those ends. Gerber's analysis reveals that the Constitution cannot be properly understood without recourse to history, political philosophy, and law.

 

Índice

Foreword by Henry J Abraham
The Jurisprudence of the American Founding
Revolution
The Federalist Papers
Early State Constitutions
From Legislative Supremacy to Judicial Review
Judicial Finality
Constitutional Interpretation
A New American Revolution?
Notes
Works Cited
Index
Direitos de autor

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Acerca do autor (1995)

Scott Douglas Gerber, Ph.D., J.D., is author of To Secure These Rights: The Declaration of Independence and Constitutional Interpretation and editor of Seriatim: The Supreme Court before John Marshall, both available from New York University Press. He teaches at Ohio Northern University College of Law.

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