The Language of Law and the Foundations of American Constitutionalism
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:28th Jun '10
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Paperback£30.99(9780521140911)
Argues that the Founders intended the Constitution to be interpreted according to the text's meaning and its framers' original intentions.
Gary L. McDowell recovers the theoretical grounds of the original Constitution as understood by the Founders, arguing that it was their intention that the judiciary must be bound by the original meaning of the Constitution's language when interpreting it.For much of its history, the interpretation of the United States Constitution presupposed judges seeking the meaning of the text and the original intentions behind that text, a process that was deemed by Chief Justice John Marshall to be 'the most sacred rule of interpretation'. Since the end of the nineteenth century, a radically new understanding has developed in which the moral intuition of the judges is allowed to supplant the Constitution's original meaning as the foundation of interpretation. The Founders' Constitution of fixed and permanent meaning has been replaced by the idea of a 'living' or evolving constitution. Gary L. McDowell refutes this new understanding, recovering the theoretical grounds of the original Constitution as understood by those who framed and ratified it. It was, he argues, the intention of the Founders that the judiciary must be bound by the original meaning of the Constitution when interpreting it.
'The Language of Law is a vital and especially erudite contribution … The New Criterion
'… an outstanding work of scholarship, ably synthesizing and analyzing a considerable body of material and bringing out its contemporary relevance.' Society
ISBN: 9780521192897
Dimensions: 242mm x 165mm x 28mm
Weight: 720g
428 pages