Justice and empathy toward a constitutional ideal
Material type: TextPublication details: New Haven Yale University Press 2017Description: xxv, 220p. 22 cmISBN:- 9780300224269
- United States Supreme Court
- United States Supreme Court
- Judicial power -- United States
- Constitutional law -- Social aspects -- United States
- Political questions and judicial power -- United States
- Sociological jurisprudence
- Constitutional law -- Social aspects
- Judicial power
- Political questions and judicial power
- Sociological jurisprudence
- United States
- 23 347.120973 BU-J
- KF5130 .B874 2017
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 347.120973 BU-J (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 140879 |
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347.120973 BL-P People and the court judicial review in a democracy | 347.120973 BO-C Coercing virtue the worldwide rule of judges | 347.120973 BU-F Founding fathers, pop culture, and constitutional law who`s your daddy | 347.120973 BU-J Justice and empathy toward a constitutional ideal | 347.120973 BY-A All judges are political except when they are not acceptable hypocrisies and the rule of law | 347.120973 DE-J Judicial review in an age of moral pluralism | 347.120973 DE-J Judicial review and democracy |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 185-202) and index.
Introduction / by Frank Iacobucci -- A living truth -- Judicial power to command -- All that is solid -- This word "reason" -- The healthiest possible soul -- The democratic path -- Enslaving criminals -- Respecting same-sex relations -- Abortion : private and public considerations -- Race relations : between emancipation and subjugation -- Ordering moral deliberations.
"An impassioned argument for the role of courts as a moral and social agent for change and protecting the vulnerable...The Supreme Court long considered its highest mission to be the protection of individual liberty from intrusion by government, but the court shifted its focus to social and economic equality. Constitutional scholar Robert A. Burt explores this shift and its implications, especially for the legal protection of the vulnerable. Crucial to Burt's perspective is his unconventional view of the role of judges--not simply to decide disputes, but to promote a respectful dialogue leading to a genuine understanding between parties." -- Publisher's website.
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