The Supreme Court In and Out of the Stream of History: The Supreme Court in American SocietyKermit L. Hall Available as a single volume or part of the 10 volume set Supreme Court in American Society |
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Page 10
... held values . Nor does precedent impede their will : There usually are past decisions to support every position ; and where there are not , judges can overrule or distinguish the embarrassing cases . Black requires the public to believe ...
... held values . Nor does precedent impede their will : There usually are past decisions to support every position ; and where there are not , judges can overrule or distinguish the embarrassing cases . Black requires the public to believe ...
Page 24
... held the confidence of 50 percent of respondents , the Executive 35 percent , the Supreme Court 28 percent . Thirty - nine percent gave negative responses to the Court , while 33 percent lacked faith in the President and 16 per- cent in ...
... held the confidence of 50 percent of respondents , the Executive 35 percent , the Supreme Court 28 percent . Thirty - nine percent gave negative responses to the Court , while 33 percent lacked faith in the President and 16 per- cent in ...
Page 25
... held policy preferences for many people . " 132 Nonetheless , the 44 percent who favored school prayers and disfavored the Court's decision constituted fully one - third of the total population . Thus the most favorable data on the ...
... held policy preferences for many people . " 132 Nonetheless , the 44 percent who favored school prayers and disfavored the Court's decision constituted fully one - third of the total population . Thus the most favorable data on the ...
Page 33
... held over from the preceding regime . " 163 Even if vacancies occur at average intervals of 22 months , as calculated by Dahl , the President who leads the newly emergent majority party does not win working control on a nine member ...
... held over from the preceding regime . " 163 Even if vacancies occur at average intervals of 22 months , as calculated by Dahl , the President who leads the newly emergent majority party does not win working control on a nine member ...
Page 39
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Contents
2 | |
3 | |
4 | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 | |
8 | |
9 | |
The Supreme Court in American Popular Culture | 83 |
Substantive Due Process Selective Incorporation | 97 |
The Role of the Supreme Court in American Society | 149 |
A Theory of U S Constitutional History | 226 |
John Marshalls Selective Use of History in Marbury v Madison | 251 |
An Illicit Love Affair | 289 |
Revisiting the Marshall Court | 347 |
Acknowledgments | |
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Common terms and phrases
action American appears applied argued argument asserted authority Bank Bill Black branches century Chase Chief Justice cited civil claims clause conclusion Congress Constitution Convention criticism Currie decided decision determine direct discussion dissenting due process duty effect equal established evidence executive exercise existence fact federal final Fourteenth Amendment function grounds held historians holding important individual institution interests interpretation invalid involved issue John judges judicial review judiciary jurisdiction later least legislative legitimacy legitimizing liberty limited Madison majority mandamus Marbury Marshall Marshall's meaning ment moral nature necessary opinion original party period persons placed political popular precedent present President principles protection provision question reason relations Republican result role rule seems sense social society statute suggested supra note Supreme Court theory tion traditional United Wall Warren York