The United States Supreme Court: The Pursuit of Justice
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The United States Supreme Court: The Pursuit of Justice

Product Code: 1620009
Editor: Christopher Tomlins
Publication Date: November 2005
ISBN: 0-618-32969-2
Page Count: 560
Trim Size: 6 x 9 Hardcover
Topics: Courts
Format: Book - 1620009
Pricing: $40.00 (Regular)
$29.95 (ABA Member) ABA Members, Log in now to receive this discount!
Quantity:
 
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About the American Bar Foundation

The American Bar Foundation is an independent, nonprofit national research institute committed to objective empirical research on law and legal institutions. Visit the American Bar Foundation website to learn more about ABF events, research, and publications. The ABA is pleased to offer a special member discount on publications by American Bar Foundation research faculty.

About the Book

With its ability to review and interpret all American law, the Supreme Court of the United States is arguably the most influential branch of government. Yet, institutionally, it is the least powerful. Its authority relies entirely on the willing consent of the executive and legislative branches of the U.S. government and of the American people to accept it as law's ultimate arbiter. Perhaps for this very reason the Court has taken great care to shield itself from the public gaze.

Edited by Christopher Tomlins, a Senior Research Fellow at the American Bar Foundation, The United States Supreme Court offers a sweeping history of this remote and austere institution and makes the Court accessible to all readers. Eighteen essays, written by the nation's top historians, including Mark Tushnet, Scot Powe, Paul Finkelman, and Katherine Fischer Taylor, provide incisive interpretation of the Court's activities over the past two centuries, from its first meetings in borrowed space in the U.S. Capitol to the ornate "Marble Palace" of the present day.

The book showcases the Court's legal triumphs and disasters, its internal workings, and its impact on American politics, society, and culture. It also brings to light the uneasy influence of popular culture and electoral politics on the Court. Organized chronologically by the terms of each chief justice, here are fresh insights into the court's key moments and cases, from the Dred Scott decision to Brown v. Board of Education, from the Lochner era to the Warren Court, from Roe v. Wade to Bush v. Gore.