The American Revolution In the Law: Anglo-American Jurisprudence before John Marshall


Hardcover
Paperback
- Price:
- $44.00
- ISBN:
- Published:
- Jul 14, 2014
- Copyright:
- 1990
- Pages:
- 242
- Size:
- 6 x 9 in.
ebook (PDF via app)
- For sale in the United States, US Dependencies, the Philippines, and Canada
In 1773 John Adams observed that one source of tension in the debate between England and the colonies could be traced to the different conceptions each side had of the terms 鈥渓egally鈥 and 鈥渃onstitutionally鈥—different conceptions that were, as Shannon Stimson here demonstrates, symptomatic of deeper jurisprudential, political, and even epistemological differences between the two governmental outlooks. This study of the political and legal thought of the American revolution and founding period explores the differences between late eighteenth-century British and American perceptions of the judicial and jural power.
In Stimson’s book, which will interest both historians and theorists of law and politics, the study of colonial juries provides an incisive tool for organizing, interpreting, and evaluating various strands of American political theory, and for challenging the common assumption of a basic unity of vision of the roots of Anglo-American jurisprudence. The author introduces an original concept, that of 鈥渏udicial space,鈥 to account for the development of the highly political role of the Supreme Court, a judicial body that has no clear counterpart in English jurisprudence.
Originally published in 1990.
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