Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/007303359/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 30 of
30
with 100 items per page.
- catalog contributor b10085437.
- catalog created "c1997.".
- catalog date "1997".
- catalog date "c1997.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "c1997.".
- catalog description "Equal protection clause (and contrived due process) -- Apportionment -- Abortion -- Part Third. The Least [struck through with hyphens] dangerous branch -- Intimations of judicial supremacy -- The Threat of an imperial judiciary intensifies -- Deciphering the surprising appeal of judicialized government -- The issue joined: Constitutional government or government by judiciary -- Reforming the judicial branch by distinguishing functions of review -- Thwarting Constitutional violation by introducing advisory review -- Note on locating the Supreme Constitutional Court in Mid-America.".
- catalog description "How a countermove toward federalism has been stymied -- Evaluation of possibilities remaining for attainment -- With direct limitations -- Note on Judge Hand's concerns and court dismissal -- Establishment clause -- Fallacy and folly in religion clause doctrine -- Justices Brandeis and Holmes provide precedent for dismantlement -- Speech/Press clause -- What purpose for freedom of oral and written communication? -- Self-government as objective: the Court follows the beam -- Self-expression as error: the Court forsakes the beam -- Note on protest as protected speech -- Due process clauses (incorporating absorbed equal protection and the Taking clause) -- Taking liberty -- Power and limitation in crisis: Japanese-American exclusion -- Taking property -- Due process as focal point in takings jurisprudence -- The Rise and demise of Locknerism -- Reaction: substantive due process in disrepute -- Uncertain revival -- Note on current attempts to solve the "puzzle" of takings -- ".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references.".
- catalog description "Part First. Originating conceptions -- Evolving theories of limitation -- Indirect limitations -- Direct limitations -- Emerging patterns of judicial function -- The judiciary's designed function of judicial review -- Constitutional limitation without invalidation -- The Misunderstanding of Bayard v. Singleton, NC 1787 -- Insinuation of the undesigned judicial function of Constitutional review Marbury v. Madison 1803 -- John Marshall's reasoning is refuted but prevails -- Part Second. Supreme Court performance in exercise of Constitutional review -- With indirect limitations -- Separation of powers -- Court administration of check and balance has been satisfactory -- Disconnection, as well as merger, can be unconstitutional -- Federalism -- How the Tenth Amendment has been inexcusably eroded -- The Importance of federalism in Constitutional limitation -- Note on the relation between direct and indirect limitations -- Term limits -- ".
- catalog extent "xi, 178 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Judicial function in constitutional limitation of governmental power.".
- catalog identifier "0890899436".
- catalog isFormatOf "Judicial function in constitutional limitation of governmental power.".
- catalog issued "1997".
- catalog issued "c1997.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Durham, N.C. : Carolina Academic Press,".
- catalog relation "Judicial function in constitutional limitation of governmental power.".
- catalog spatial "United States.".
- catalog subject "347.73/12 21".
- catalog subject "Constitutional law United States.".
- catalog subject "Judicial review United States.".
- catalog subject "KF4575 .S77 1997".
- catalog subject "Political questions and judicial power United States.".
- catalog subject "Separation of powers United States.".
- catalog tableOfContents "Equal protection clause (and contrived due process) -- Apportionment -- Abortion -- Part Third. The Least [struck through with hyphens] dangerous branch -- Intimations of judicial supremacy -- The Threat of an imperial judiciary intensifies -- Deciphering the surprising appeal of judicialized government -- The issue joined: Constitutional government or government by judiciary -- Reforming the judicial branch by distinguishing functions of review -- Thwarting Constitutional violation by introducing advisory review -- Note on locating the Supreme Constitutional Court in Mid-America.".
- catalog tableOfContents "How a countermove toward federalism has been stymied -- Evaluation of possibilities remaining for attainment -- With direct limitations -- Note on Judge Hand's concerns and court dismissal -- Establishment clause -- Fallacy and folly in religion clause doctrine -- Justices Brandeis and Holmes provide precedent for dismantlement -- Speech/Press clause -- What purpose for freedom of oral and written communication? -- Self-government as objective: the Court follows the beam -- Self-expression as error: the Court forsakes the beam -- Note on protest as protected speech -- Due process clauses (incorporating absorbed equal protection and the Taking clause) -- Taking liberty -- Power and limitation in crisis: Japanese-American exclusion -- Taking property -- Due process as focal point in takings jurisprudence -- The Rise and demise of Locknerism -- Reaction: substantive due process in disrepute -- Uncertain revival -- Note on current attempts to solve the "puzzle" of takings -- ".
- catalog tableOfContents "Part First. Originating conceptions -- Evolving theories of limitation -- Indirect limitations -- Direct limitations -- Emerging patterns of judicial function -- The judiciary's designed function of judicial review -- Constitutional limitation without invalidation -- The Misunderstanding of Bayard v. Singleton, NC 1787 -- Insinuation of the undesigned judicial function of Constitutional review Marbury v. Madison 1803 -- John Marshall's reasoning is refuted but prevails -- Part Second. Supreme Court performance in exercise of Constitutional review -- With indirect limitations -- Separation of powers -- Court administration of check and balance has been satisfactory -- Disconnection, as well as merger, can be unconstitutional -- Federalism -- How the Tenth Amendment has been inexcusably eroded -- The Importance of federalism in Constitutional limitation -- Note on the relation between direct and indirect limitations -- Term limits -- ".
- catalog title "Judicial function in constitutional limitation of government power / Frank R. Strong.".
- catalog type "text".