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Who Decides : States as Laboratories of Constitutional Experimentation / Jeffrey S. Sutton.

By: Publisher: New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2022]Description: pages cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780197582183
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Online version:: Who decidesDDC classification:
  • 342.73042 SUT 23
LOC classification:
  • KF4530 .S889 2022
Contents:
Table of Contents Preface; Introduction; Part I: The Judicial Branch; 1 Umpiring and Gerrymandering; 2 Judicial Review: Democracy and Duty; 3 Judicial Selection: How to Use Democracy to Select Individuals for a Non-Democratic Job; 4 Are You a Territorial Judge or a Territorial Lawyer?; Part II: The Executive Branch; 5 One Chief Executive or Many?; 6 Administrative Law: How to Write and Implement Our Laws?; Part III: The Legistlative Branch; 7 State Legislatures and Distrust: Clear-Title and Single-Subject Requirements; 8 Trying to Make Legislatures More Representative; Part IV; 9 Local Governments; Part V; 10 Amending Constitutions to Meet Changing Circumstances; Epilogue; Appendix; Notes; Index
Summary: "51 Imperfect Solutions told stories about specific state and federal individual constitutional rights, and explained two benefits of American federalism: how two sources of constitutional protection for liberty and property rights could be valuable to individual freedom and how the state courts could be useful laboratories of innovation when it comes to the development of national constitutional rights. This book tells the other half of the story. Instead of focusing on state constitutional individual rights, this book takes on state constitutional structure. Everything in law and politics, including individual rights, comes back to divisions of power and the evergreen question: Who decides? The goal of this book is to tell the structure side of the story and to identify the shifting balances of power revealed when one accounts for American constitutional law as opposed to just federal constitutional law. The book contains three main parts-on the judicial, executive, and legislative branches-as well as stand-alone chapters on home-rule issues raised by local governments and the benefits and burdens raised by the ease of amending state constitutions. A theme in the book is the increasingly stark divide between the ever-more democratic nature of state governments and the ever-less democratic nature of the federal government over time"-- Provided by publisher.
List(s) this item appears in: NAAC 2021-22
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BOOKs National Law School General Stacks 342.73042 SUT (Browse shelf(Opens below)) HB Available 38759

Table of Contents
Preface;
Introduction;
Part I: The Judicial Branch;
1 Umpiring and Gerrymandering;
2 Judicial Review: Democracy and Duty;
3 Judicial Selection: How to Use Democracy to Select Individuals for a Non-Democratic Job;
4 Are You a Territorial Judge or a Territorial Lawyer?;
Part II: The Executive Branch;
5 One Chief Executive or Many?;
6 Administrative Law: How to Write and Implement Our Laws?;
Part III: The Legistlative Branch;
7 State Legislatures and Distrust: Clear-Title and Single-Subject Requirements;
8 Trying to Make Legislatures More Representative;
Part IV;
9 Local Governments;
Part V;
10 Amending Constitutions to Meet Changing Circumstances;
Epilogue;
Appendix;
Notes;
Index

"51 Imperfect Solutions told stories about specific state and federal individual constitutional rights, and explained two benefits of American federalism: how two sources of constitutional protection for liberty and property rights could be valuable to individual freedom and how the state courts could be useful laboratories of innovation when it comes to the development of national constitutional rights. This book tells the other half of the story. Instead of focusing on state constitutional individual rights, this book takes on state constitutional structure. Everything in law and politics, including individual rights, comes back to divisions of power and the evergreen question: Who decides? The goal of this book is to tell the structure side of the story and to identify the shifting balances of power revealed when one accounts for American constitutional law as opposed to just federal constitutional law. The book contains three main parts-on the judicial, executive, and legislative branches-as well as stand-alone chapters on home-rule issues raised by local governments and the benefits and burdens raised by the ease of amending state constitutions. A theme in the book is the increasingly stark divide between the ever-more democratic nature of state governments and the ever-less democratic nature of the federal government over time"-- Provided by publisher.

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