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OverviewMore than one in four American workers now requires a government license to do their job. In the 1950s, that number was closer to one in twenty. No constitutional amendment authorized that expansion. No public safety crisis demanded it. It happened because occupational licensing is one of the most effective political tools ever invented for protecting established practitioners from competition - and because the constitutional limits on government licensing authority are among the best-kept secrets in American law. Those limits are real. They are grounded in Supreme Court decisions spanning eight decades. And this book explains exactly what they are, where they apply, and how to use them. The Supreme Court established in Murdock v. Pennsylvania that government cannot require a license for the exercise of a First Amendment right and charge a fee for that license. It established in Shuttlesworth v. City of Birmingham that a permit ordinance giving officials unbridled discretion to grant or deny permission for citizens to exercise constitutional rights is unconstitutional on its face. The landmark decisions in Heller and Bruen established that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms that firearms licensing requirements must justify against demanding constitutional scrutiny. And the Fourteenth Amendment's protection of liberty has been applied by federal courts to strike down occupational licensing requirements that serve no purpose other than protecting incumbent practitioners from price competition. This book covers all of it - accurately, completely, and in plain English that any reader can understand and use. You will learn what Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham actually held versus what it is popularly claimed to say, and why that distinction matters enormously for anyone who tries to invoke it. You will learn how licensing fees function as unconstitutional taxes on fundamental rights, what the poll tax parallel reveals about the Constitution's limits on government pricing of rights, and how to challenge fees that exceed legitimate administrative cost recovery. You will learn how licensing boards dominated by incumbent practitioners function as government-enforced cartels, what the Supreme Court's antitrust decision in North Carolina State Board of Dental Examiners means for practitioners facing anticompetitive board conduct, and what the documented research on licensing and consumer outcomes reveals about the public safety justification that licensing advocates invoke in every legislative hearing. The Institute for Justice has spent three decades litigating these constitutional limits in federal courts across the country - winning landmark victories for hair braiders, tour guides, casket makers, and dozens of other practitioners whose licensing requirements could not survive honest constitutional scrutiny. This book examines that litigation record in full, including the defeats alongside the victories, because understanding where constitutional challenges succeed and where they face genuine doctrinal obstacles is more useful than a curated list of favorable precedents. Whether you are a small business owner facing burdensome licensing requirements, a citizen confronting permit demands for the exercise of First Amendment rights, a firearms owner navigating the post-Bruen licensing landscape, or an aspiring professional blocked from economic opportunity by a licensing requirement that bears no relationship to your work - this book hands you the specific constitutional knowledge, the practical challenge framework, and the organizational resources to understand when the government's permission slip demand is legitimate and when it crosses a constitutional line that eighty years of Supreme Court decisions have made clear. Your rights do not require a license. This book proves it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Adrian ShapiroPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.485kg ISBN: 9798197557216Pages: 364 Publication Date: 18 May 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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