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Constitutional Law

Vanderbilt Law Review

Bill of Rights

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"The House Was Quiet And The World Was Calm The Reader Became The Book", Burt Neuborne Nov 2004

"The House Was Quiet And The World Was Calm The Reader Became The Book", Burt Neuborne

Vanderbilt Law Review

Professor Neuborne argues that we err in reading the Bill of Rights "in splendid isolation" as a randomly ordered set of clause-bound norms. Instead, he argues that the disciplined order and placement of the thirty-three ideas in the Bill of Rights, especially the six textual ideas united in the First Amendment, reveals a deep contextual structure imposed by the Founders that sheds important light on the meaning of the constitutional text. He argues that the "vertical" order of the first ten amendments, as well as the "horizontal" order of ideas within each amendment, provides important clues to a judge seeking …


A Precarious Path: The Bill Of Rights After 200 Years, Tony A. Freyer Apr 1994

A Precarious Path: The Bill Of Rights After 200 Years, Tony A. Freyer

Vanderbilt Law Review

The Bill of Rights occupies an ambiguous place in American society. Americans favor the Bill of Rights in principle, but when asked whether they support particular rights guarantees for real-life practices such as gun ownership, capital punishment, abortion, and flag burning, Americans fervently and profoundly disagree. The essays David J. Bodenhamer and James W. Ely, Jr. have compiled in The Bill of Rights in Modern America After 200 Years, richly suggest why Americans have reconciled principle and practice with such difficulty. Written for a popular audience by specialists who possess a profound knowledge of and differing views concerning the technical …


Another View: Our Magnificent Constitution, William B. Reynolds Nov 1987

Another View: Our Magnificent Constitution, William B. Reynolds

Vanderbilt Law Review

Let me start with the observation that I regard myself to be most privileged to be a public servant at a time when we celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Constitution a magnificent document that has, in my view, no equal in history and every reason to be feted. It is by now no revelation that the Framers would be aghast at the size and reach of government today; but they would also be enormously proud of how much of their legacy has endured. The vitality of the original Constitution, and its various amendments, is reflected by its ability to …


Book Reviews, Robert J. Harris (Reviewer), John Raeburn Green (Reviewer), H. C. Nixon (Reviewer) Dec 1956

Book Reviews, Robert J. Harris (Reviewer), John Raeburn Green (Reviewer), H. C. Nixon (Reviewer)

Vanderbilt Law Review

----------------------------------- Book Reviews ----------------------------------

The Forgotten Ninth Amendment

By Bennett B. Patterson

Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1955. Pp. ix, 217. $4.00.

reviewer: Robert J. Harris

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The Birth of the Bill of Rights, 1776-1791

By Robert Allen Rutland

Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1955. Pp. vii,243. $5.00.

reviewer: John Raeburn Green

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James Wilson: Founding Father, 1742-1798

By Charles Page Smith

Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1956. Pp. xii, 426.$7.50.

reviewer: H. C. Nixon