Copyright Date:
1999
Edition Date:
1999
Release Date:
06/30/99
Pages:
ix, 374 pages
ISBN:
0-313-30602-8
ISBN 13:
978-0-313-30602-0
Dewey:
342.73
LCCN:
98044220
Dimensions:
24 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist
(Wed Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 1999)
Designed for high-school students and general readers, this volume discusses 74 cases under four broad topics: the distribution of powers, the relationship between the nation and its states, concepts of equality, and individual rights. These are divided further into more specific topics. We found Lemon v. Kurzman n "The Fifteenth Amendment: Freedom of Religion" chapter in the section on individual rights. There is a three-and-a-half-page treatment of the case that includes a summary of key facts, analysis, and a brief bibliography. The thematic approach combined with fairly detailed discussion of individual cases works well.
Bibliography Index/Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 351-354) and index.
This needed resource, written specifically for students and general readers, provides accessible discussions of 74 landmark Supreme Court cases that will help students understand the cases and their importance in American history. Cases selected for this work are those in which the Supreme Court's decisions have had a profound impact on society and the future and a meaning that transcends the impact on the immediate parties. In his own words, Donald Lively, Dean of Florida Coastal School of Law, discusses the facts, background, and significance of each landmark case so that students will be able to easily understand it. Each case features a fact box for quick reference succinctly identifying the issue, year of decision, outcome, vote, and author of the opinion. The narrative discussion of each case puts it in historical perspective, examines the background and constitutional issue involved, the case itself, why it is a landmark case, and its significance and impact. A short bibliography directs readers to a more in-depth discussion of the case and issue. The work is organized topically into four parts, within which the cases are organized chronologically from the nation's first court through the 1990s so that the reader can trace the progression of the Court's thinking on the issue. Part I focuses upon the separation and distribution of powers among the branches of government. Part II consists of cases that have been crucial in determining the relationship between the nation and its states, the concept of federalism, and regulation of the country's economy. Part III deals with the most important cases involving equality--race, gender, and fundamental rights. Part IV identifies landmark cases on individual rights and liberties--freedom of speech, association, press and other media, religion, search and seizure, self-incrimination, right to counsel, cruel and unusual punishment, economic rights, and the right to privacy. Each part begins with an overview of the issues raised by the cases discussed. A glossary of legal terms, a table of cases, and a handy text of the Constitution will help the student researcher. This work is ideal for the high school library and classroom.