The Rise of Modern Judicial Review: From Constitutional Interpretation to Judge-made Law

Front Cover
Rowman & Littlefield, 1994 - Law - 447 pages
This major history of judicial review, revised to include the Rehnquist court, shows how modern courts have used their power to create new "rights with fateful political consequences." Originally published by Basic Books.

From inside the book

Contents

IV
17
V
18
VI
20
VII
24
VIII
37
IX
39
XI
41
XII
51
LIX
219
LX
222
LXI
223
LXIII
230
LXIV
239
LXV
241
LXVI
242
LXVII
248

XIII
56
XIV
63
XV
71
XVI
73
XVII
74
XVIII
76
XIX
80
XX
84
XXI
90
XXIII
97
XXIV
101
XXV
116
XXVI
121
XXVII
123
XXIX
127
XXX
131
XXXI
138
XXXII
140
XXXIII
144
XXXV
148
XXXVI
150
XXXVII
153
XXXVIII
156
XXXIX
160
XL
164
XLI
166
XLII
168
XLIII
169
XLIV
170
XLV
172
XLVI
178
XLVII
181
XLVIII
182
XLIX
184
L
188
LI
192
LII
195
LIII
199
LIV
205
LVI
207
LVII
209
LVIII
216
LXVIII
256
LXIX
258
LXX
259
LXXI
262
LXXII
265
LXXIII
268
LXXIV
275
LXXV
277
LXXVI
281
LXXVII
282
LXXVIII
286
LXXIX
289
LXXX
292
LXXXI
294
LXXXII
298
LXXXIII
307
LXXXIV
310
LXXXV
313
LXXXVI
315
LXXXVII
318
LXXXVIII
321
LXXXIX
323
XC
325
XCI
327
XCII
329
XCIII
336
XCIV
343
XCV
352
XCVI
359
XCVII
360
XCVIII
365
XCIX
369
C
377
CI
379
CII
381
CIII
384
CIV
397
CV
403
CVI
433
CVII
441
CVIII
445
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1994)

Christopher Wolfe is Professor of Political Science at Marquette University.

Bibliographic information