John Marshall: Definer of a NationMacmillan, 1998. 3. 15. - 800페이지 A New York Times Notable Book of 1996 |
도서 본문에서
81개의 결과 중 1 - 5개
... authority , and affirmed the Constitution as an instrument of the people , not of the states . As a result , the implied powers of the federal government took on definition , the workings of the national government gained authority ...
... authority . Traditionally , justices of high tribunals have writ- ten their own opinions , announcing them individually . Under Marshall's leadership , the U.S. Supreme Court initiated the practice of delivering a sin- gle opinion of ...
... authority of the Supreme Court to in- terpret the Constitution . Today that authority is taken for granted , but it was not universally recognized in 1801. Constitutions are political documents . They define the way a nation is governed ...
... authority . Not surprisingly , his decisions were occasionally unpopular . Some of the most important were taken in the face of hostile chief executives - espe- cially when Jefferson and Jackson were in the White House . Marshall suc ...
... authority of the states , favored the yeoman virtues of agrarian society , and tended to be more egalitarian than the Fed- eralists . The extreme wing of the Federalists saw Jefferson's party as a rab- ble bent on seizing power to ...
목차
Marshalls Virginia Heritage | 21 |
Soldier of the Revolution | 37 |
Student and Suitor | 70 |
Husband Lawyer Legislator | 87 |
The Fight for Ratification | 115 |
At the Richmond Bar | 144 |
Virginia Federalist | 169 |
Mission to Paris The XYZ Affair | 192 |
The Center Holds | 327 |
Treason Defined | 348 |
Yazoo | 375 |
A Band of Brothers | 395 |
National Supremacy | 417 |
Steamboats | 446 |
The Chief Justice and Old Hickory | 482 |
Notes | 525 |