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Saying What the Law Is
By
Charles Fried
Description
2005 Choice Magazine Outstanding
Academic Title
In a few thousand words the
Constitution sets up the government of the United States and
proclaims the basic human and political rights of its people. From
the interpretation and elaboration of those words in over 500 volumes
of Supreme Court cases comes the constitutional law that structures
our government and defines our individual relationship to that
government. This book fills the need for an account of that law free
from legal jargon and clear enough to inform the educated layperson,
yet which does not condescend or slight critical nuance, so that its
judgments and analyses will engage students, practitioners, judges,
and scholars.
Taking the reader up to and through
such controversial recent Supreme Court decisions as the Texas sodomy
case and the University of Michigan affirmative action case, Charles
Fried sets out to make sense of the main topics of constitutional
law: the nature of doctrine, federalism, separation of powers,
freedom of expression, religion, liberty, and equality.
Fried draws on his knowledge as a
teacher and scholar, and on his unique experience as a practitioner
before the Supreme Court, a former Associate Justice of the Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts, and Solicitor General of the United
States to offer an evenhanded account not only of the substance of
constitutional law, but of its texture and underlying themes. His
book firmly draws the reader into the heart of today\\\'s constitutional
battles. He understands what moves today\\\'s Court and that
understanding illuminates his analyses.
Contents
Preface
1. Doctrine
2. Federalism
3. Separation of Powers
4. Speech
5. Religion
6. Liberty and Property
7. Equality
Afterword
Notes
Table of Cases
Index
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