Morality Imposed: The Rehnquist Court and Liberty in America

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NYU Press, 2000 - 342 páginas

We like to think of judges and justices as making decisions based on the facts and the law. But to what extent do jurists decide cases in accordance with their own preexisting philosophy of law, and what specific ideological assumptions account for their decisions?
Stephen E. Gottlieb adopts a unique perspective on the decision-making of Supreme Court justices, blending and re-characterizing traditional accounts of political philosophy in a way that plausibly explains many of the justices' voting patterns.
A seminal study of the Rehnquist Court, Morality Imposed illustrates how, in contrast to previous courts which took their mandate to be a move toward a freer and/or happier society, the current court evidences little concern for this goal, focusing instead on thinly veiled moral judgments. Delineating a fault line between liberal and conservative justices on the Rehnquist Court, Gottlieb suggests that conservative justices have rejected the basic principles that informed post-New Deal individual rights jurisprudence and have substituted their own conceptions of moral character for these fundamental principles.
Morality Imposed adds substantially to our understanding of the Supreme Court, its most recent cases, and the evolution of judicial philosophy in the U.S.

 

Contenido

Where Utilitarians Diverge
8
Coda
9
Why and How This Book Origins
10
The Gulf
24
Eclectic or Unprincipled?
64
Three Justices in Search of a Character
84
Between Two Worlds ix
114
1
147
128
214
147
215
163
232
Ideological Canons Notes
257
190
258
199
259
Bibliography
297
Index
323

24
151
64
157
84
161
About the Author 342
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Stephen E. Gottlieb is the Jay and Ruth Caplan Distinguished Professor of Law at Albany Law School and author of numerous books on jurisprudence and constitutional law.

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