(Source: OUP)
Oxford
University Press has published the 3rd and final volume of Professor
White’s “Law in American History”.
ABOUT THE BOOK
In Law in American History, Volume III:
1930-2000, the eminent legal scholar G. Edward White concludes his sweeping
history of law in America, from the colonial era to the near-present. Picking
up where his previous volume left off, at the end of the 1920s, White turns his
attention to modern developments in both public and private law. One of his
findings is that despite the massive changes in American society since the New
Deal, some of the landmark constitutional decisions from that period remain
salient today. An illustration is the Court's sweeping interpretation of the
reach of Congress's power under the Commerce Clause in Wickard v. Filburn
(1942), a decision that figured prominently in the Supreme Court's recent
decision to uphold the Affordable Care Act.
In these formative years of modern American
jurisprudence, courts responded to, and affected, the emerging role of the
state and federal governments as regulatory and redistributive institutions and
the growing participation of the United States in world affairs. They extended
their reach into domains they had mostly ignored: foreign policy, executive
power, criminal procedure, and the rights of speech, sexuality, and voting.
Today, the United States continues to grapple with changing legal issues in
each of those domains. Law in American History, Volume III provides an
authoritative introduction to how modern American jurisprudence emerged and
evolved of the course of the twentieth century, and the impact of law on every
major feature of American life in that century. White's two preceding volumes
and this one constitute a definitive treatment of the role of law in American
history.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
G. Edward
White is
David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law and University Professor
at the University of Virginia. His seventeen previous books include The
American Judicial Tradition, The Marshall Court and Cultural Change,and Justice
Oliver Wendell Holmes: Law and the Inner Self, all of which have won major
prizes. White is also the editor of the John Harvard Library edition of Oliver
Wendell Holmes, Jr., The Common Law.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Preface and
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The American
Legal Academy and Jurisprudence I: The Emergence of Legal Realism
2. Conundrums of
War and Law
3. The Emergence
of Agency Governance: The First Half Century
4. The
Statutorification of Common Law Fields: Torts, Contracts and Commercial Law,
Civil Procedure, and Criminal Law
5. The Laws of
Mass Media
6. The American
Legal Academy and Jurisprudence II: From Process Theory to "Law And"
7. The Supreme
Court in the Era of Bifurcated Review I: The Court's Internal Work
8. The Supreme
Court in the Era of Bifurcated Review II: Foreign Relations Cases
9. The Supreme
Court in the Era of Bifurcated Review III: Due Process Cases
10. The Supreme
Court in the Era of Bifurcated Review IV: Equal Protection Cases
11. The Supreme
Court in the Era of Bifurcated Review V: Free Speech Cases
12: Law and
Politics: The Journey to Bush v. Gore
Notes
Index
More information
here
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