The Library’s new catalog is here. Call 419.259.5200 or visit any location for help.

My Library



     
Limit search to available items
1 result found. sorted by date .


Book Cover

PRINT MATL
Author Graetz, Michael J., author.

Title The burger court and the rise of the judicial right / Michael J. Graetz and Linda Greenhouse.

Publisher New York : Simon & Schuster, 2016.

ISBN 9781476732503
1476732507



Location Call No. Status Message
 Main Adult  347.7326 Gra    AVAILABLE  ---

RESOURCES
 
Add a Review

Edition First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition.
Description x, 468 pages : illustrations, photographs ; 24 cm
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents The fall and rise of the death penalty -- Taming the trilogy -- Closing the federal courthouse doors -- Still separate, still unequal -- Seeking a higher education -- Privacy at a price -- The rocky road to sex equality -- Expression and repression -- A religious people's court -- Corporations are people too -- Battling workplace inequality -- Power and its abuse -- Richard Nixon in Warren Burger's court -- Conclusion: A lasting legacy.
Summary A fresh and revelatory look at the Warren Burger Supreme Court finds that it was not a “moderate” or transitional court, as often portrayed, but a conservative one that still defines the constitutional landscape we live in today. When Richard Nixon campaigned for the presidency in 1968 he promised to change the Supreme Court. With four appointments to the court, including Warren E. Burger as the chief justice, he did just that. In 1969, the Burger Court succeeded the famously liberal Warren Court, which had significantly expanded civil liberties and was despised by conservatives across the country. The Burger Court is often described as a “transitional” court between the liberal Warren Court and the Rehnquist and Roberts Courts, a court where little of importance happened. But as Michael J. Graetz and Linda Greenhouse show, the Burger Court veered well to the right in such areas as criminal law, race, and corporate power. Even while declaring a right to abortion in Roe v. Wade, it drew the line at government funding for poor women. The authors excavate the roots of the most significant Burger Court decisions and show how their legacy affects us today. The most comprehensive evaluation of the Burger Supreme Court ever written for a general audience, The Burger Court and the Rise of the Judicial Right draws on the personal papers of the justices as well as other archives to reveal how the Court shaped its major decisions. It will surprise even legal scholars and historians with its insights into a period that has received too little attention from either.
Subject Burger, Warren E., 1907-1995.
United States. Supreme Court -- History -- 20th century.
Subject(S) Political questions and judicial power -- History -- 20th century.
Added Name(S) Greenhouse, Linda, author.
ISBN 9781476732503
1476732507