The supreme court: an analytic history of constitutional decision making
Material type: TextPublication details: Cambridge University Press New York 2019Description: xxii, 428 pISBN:- 9781108436939
- 347.732609 CLA
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Bodh Gaya General Stacks | PPGM | 347.732609 CLA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 2 | Available | IIMG-002585 |
Table of Contents 1. The history of constitutional law: inside and outside 2. Modeling constitutional doctrine 3. An empirical model of constitutional decision making 4. The cases, votes, and opinions 5. Patterns in constitutional law 6. From civil war to regulation and federal power 7. War, security, and culture clash 8. Conclusion.
This book presents a quantitative history of constitutional law in the United States and brings together humanistic and social-scientific approaches to studying law. Using theoretical models of adjudication, Tom S. Clark presents a statistical model of law and uses the model to document the historical development of constitutional law. Using sophisticated statistical methods and historical analysis of court decisions, the author documents how social and political forces shape the path of law. Spanning the history of constitutional law since Reconstruction, this book illustrates the way in which the law evolves with American life and argues that a social-scientific approach to the history of law illuminates connections across disparate areas of the law, connected by the social context in which the Constitution has been interpreted.
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