Judicial Power and American Character: Censoring Ourselves in an Anxious Age / Edition 1

Judicial Power and American Character: Censoring Ourselves in an Anxious Age / Edition 1

by Robert F. Nagel
ISBN-10:
0195089014
ISBN-13:
9780195089011
Pub. Date:
11/03/1994
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195089014
ISBN-13:
9780195089011
Pub. Date:
11/03/1994
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Judicial Power and American Character: Censoring Ourselves in an Anxious Age / Edition 1

Judicial Power and American Character: Censoring Ourselves in an Anxious Age / Edition 1

by Robert F. Nagel
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Overview

In this highly original book, Robert Nagel demonstrates how contemporary constitutional politics reflect the moral character of American culture. He persuasively argues that judicial decisions embody wider social tendenceies towards moral evasiveness, privatization, and opportunism. Constitutional interpretation, he urges, is often an effort to stifle political disagreement and, ultimately, to censor our own beliefs and traditions. Nagel ranges over such controversial topics as the confirmation hearings of Clarence Thomas and Robert Bork, local resistance to abortion rights, political correctness on campus, and judicial decisions dealing with pornography, flag burning, gay rights, school prayer, and racial desegregation. Crossing conventional political and philosophical lines, the analysis is surprising and provocative. Nagel sees fundamental similarities between liberals like Ronald Dworkin and conservatives like Bork. He finds judicial arrogance in jurists as different as William Brennan and Sandra O'Connor. Clearly written and forcefully argued, this work is an audacious examination of judicial power as an integral part of our increasingly anxious and intolerant society.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195089011
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/03/1994
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.32(w) x 9.52(h) x 0.75(d)
Lexile: 1480L (what's this?)

About the Author

Robert F. Nagel is Ira Rothgerber, Jr., Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Colorado and author of Constitutional Cultures: The Mentality and Consequence of Judicial Review (1989). He has written for the New Republic, Washington Monthly, Public Interest, Wall Street Journal, and the National Review.

Table of Contents

1.Introduction: The Court as Cultural Barometer3
2.Watching Ourselves: The Thomas Hearings and National Character9
Inequality as Equality10
Offensiveness as Virtue14
Careerism and Sexual Equality16
Careerism and Responsibility20
Moralism and Opportunism24
3.Shaping Law: Elitism and Democracy in the Bork Hearings27
Bork against the Mainstream28
Bork as the Mainstream31
Meeting the Enemy39
4.Marching on Constitution Avenue: Public Protest and the Court45
Judges as Politicians47
Marching and Advocacy51
Legalism, Realism, and Edwin Meese's Heresy56
5.Speaking before All Others: Interpretation as the Suppression of Disagreement61
The Rule of Law64
Legal Traditions and Constitutional Rights66
Political Resistance and the Expansion of Rights71
6.Pursuing Visions: Interpretation as Moral Evasion81
Sexual Speech and Moral Climate83
Flag Burning and Political Ethos91
Boundlessness and Adjudication96
7.Correcting the Political: Interpretation as Mind Control103
Regulating Sexist Speech104
The Court and Consciousness Raising109
Mind Control and Censorship119
8.Arguing with Enemies: Interpretation as Invective123
Name-Calling in the Courts124
Judicial Restraint and Moral Heroism129
The Ideal of Moderation in a Divided Society132
Restraint and the Judicial Machine136
9.Censoring Ourselves141
Principle Ascendant144
Principle, "Progress," and the Tradition of the Family147
Principle as Suppression151
Principle and Cultural Decline155
Notes157
Index182
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