The Republic According to John Marshall HarlanUNC Press Books, 1999 - 286페이지 Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan (1833-1911) is best known for condemning racial segregation in his dissent from Plessy v. Ferguson in 1896, when he declared, "Our Constitution is color-blind." But in other judicial decisions_as well as i |
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3 페이지
... efforts to prove that Harlan was a great judge . Sources that seemed irrelevant to proving his greatness were ignored . Evidence that did not seem to support Harlan's greatness troubled them . In effect , Harlan's latest biographer ...
... efforts to prove that Harlan was a great judge . Sources that seemed irrelevant to proving his greatness were ignored . Evidence that did not seem to support Harlan's greatness troubled them . In effect , Harlan's latest biographer ...
8 페이지
... effort . To paraphrase Horwitz , this reduces judicial biography to the pathetic role of justifying the judges as they were . Instead of proving that Harlan was a great judge , this book tries to put to use the legal realists ' insight ...
... effort . To paraphrase Horwitz , this reduces judicial biography to the pathetic role of justifying the judges as they were . Instead of proving that Harlan was a great judge , this book tries to put to use the legal realists ' insight ...
10 페이지
... effort to ensure equal rights to blacks . Taking a cue from Harlan's identification of law and religion , I use three stories about race and religion to explain the inconsistency of his judicial record on black rights . Although Harlan ...
... effort to ensure equal rights to blacks . Taking a cue from Harlan's identification of law and religion , I use three stories about race and religion to explain the inconsistency of his judicial record on black rights . Although Harlan ...
11 페이지
... efforts to facilitate this national marketplace was the growth of corporations of unprecedented size . Harlan was sure that the men who created these giants had somehow violated the natural laws of the economy . He condemned their ...
... efforts to facilitate this national marketplace was the growth of corporations of unprecedented size . Harlan was sure that the men who created these giants had somehow violated the natural laws of the economy . He condemned their ...
28 페이지
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목차
The Best Type of Slaveholders A Family Ethic of Paternalism | 14 |
Little or No Scope for Originality Law Religion and the Union | 44 |
An Opportunity to Make a Record The Judges Role | 73 |
Every True Man Has Pride of Race Civil Rights Social Rights and Racial Identity | 81 |
The Hopes of Freemen Everywhere AngloSaxonism and the SpanishAmerican War | 118 |
This Age of Money Getting Constitutional Nationalism and Free Labor | 147 |
You May Rightfully Aspire Manhood and Success in the Republic | 185 |
Conclusion | 203 |
Harlans List of Opinions for Publication | 209 |
Notes | 213 |
251 | |
279 | |
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abolitionists Anglo-Saxons Archibald Grimké argued believed Berea College Bill of Rights blacks Bristow Centre College century Christian church citizens civil rights clause color-blind Congress Constitution corporations decisions declared Democratic doctrine Dred Scott economic emancipation father federal Fourteenth Amendment frame Frederick Douglass free labor Grimké Harlan dissented Harlan explained Harlan told Harlan wrote Ibid idea interracial interstate commerce issue James Harlan Jews JMayH JMH Lectures JMH Papers JMH to JSH John Harlan John Marshall Harlan John Maynard judge jury Justice Harlan Kentucky Law Review lawyers letter Louisville Malvina marriage miscegenation mission Negro opinion paternalism Plessy political Presbyterian public accommodations public schools question Quoted race racial identity railroad Republic Republican Scrapbook segregation slaveholders slavery slaves social equality social rights southern story Supreme Court Taft thought tion Union United University UofL Washington WHT Papers William York