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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Keith E. WhittingtonPublisher: University Press of Kansas Imprint: University Press of Kansas Dimensions: Width: 16.20cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 23.60cm Weight: 0.800kg ISBN: 9780700627790ISBN 10: 0700627790 Pages: 432 Publication Date: 30 May 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"""An impressive piece of scholarship that provides a comprehensive account of how the Supreme Court has used judicial review for multiple purposes, not merely check congressional power but also to constitute it.""--Political Science Quarterly ""Repugnant Laws is a groundbreaking work, and the data on which it is based will prove invaluable to scholars of judicial politics. Whittington also deserves much credit for pointing the way toward a more nuanced understanding of the Supreme Court's relationship to political parties and electoral coalitions.""--Constitutional Commentary ""Readers will get a strong sense of the key issues on which judicial review turned across the eras of U.S. political history, as well as the policy goals and political conflicts that animated Congress in the first place.""--Journal of Interdisciplinary History ""Repugnant Laws stands as a helpful corrective to the partisan narratives of both sides--and is sure to set the standard for books of its kind for decades to come.""--The American Interest ""An impressively thorough, empirical study of judicial review, from the founding to the Supreme Court's 2017 term. The book makes for rewarding reading.""--Claremont Review of Books ""Whittington here offers a thorough rejoinder to the often-repeated notion that the Supreme Court's exercise of judicial review is counter majoritarian. He also offers novel and thought-provoking analyses of famous cases, placing them in new light. There may be no better time to seek a fuller understanding of how judicial independence (whether in the form of activism or otherwise) can arise in different forms. Wthittington's book is sure to inform those discussions. Highly recommended.""--Choice ""As contemporary judicial selection politics amplify the urgency of discussions regarding judicial activism, the Court's legitimacy, and the relationship between party and judicial office, Whittington's study reminds readers that the Supreme Court has long acted as a nation-builder and an arm of the national state, operating within partisan politics. In stressing 'the conditional quality of judicial independence, ' Whittington offers the counsel of perspective on our current era of partisan polarization and strained inter-branch relations.""--Nancy Maveety, author of Queen's Court: Judicial Power in the Rehnquist Era ""Keith Whittington's invaluable and comprehensive survey of Supreme Court decisions striking down&#mdash;and upholding--federal statutes carefully maps the complex relations between the Court and the political coalitions that produce, support, or sometimes abandon the laws the Court reviews. Bringing insights from American political development to bear, Whittington has supplanted Robert Dahl's classic work while preserving its core. Everyone interested in American political development and the Supreme Court must now take this work into account.""--Mark Tushnet, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law, Harvard Law School ""Any book by Keith Whittington is an important book, and this one is no exception. Facts matter and this book provides them. From now on, no discussion of the practice of judicial review can ignore its empirical findings. The most cynical political scientist will need to come to grips with its conclusion that 'the justices are not lapdogs, and they have often bitten the hand of the party that put them on the bench.' At the same time, idealists will need to incorporate its findings that the 'justices have proven themselves to be allies of [their] political coalition leaders.' Simply a must-read for any serious student of our Constitution and how it actually works.""--Randy E. Barnett, director of the Georgetown Center for the Constitution; author of Our Republican Constitution: Securing the Liberty and Sovereignty of We the People" As contemporary judicial selection politics amplify the urgency of discussions regarding judicial activism, the Court's legitimacy, and the relationship between party and judicial office, Whittington's study reminds readers that the Supreme Court has long acted as a nation-builder and an arm of the national state, operating within partisan politics. In stressing 'the conditional quality of judicial independence, ' Whittington offers the counsel of perspective on our current era of partisan polarization and strained inter-branch relations. --Nancy Maveety, author of Queen's Court: Judicial Power in the Rehnquist Era Keith Whittington's invaluable and comprehensive survey of Supreme Court decisions striking down&#mdash;and upholding--federal statutes carefully maps the complex relations between the Court and the political coalitions that produce, support, or sometimes abandon the laws the Court reviews. Bringing insights from American political development to bear, Whittington has supplanted Robert Dahl's classic work while preserving its core. Everyone interested in American political development and the Supreme Court must now take this work into account. --Mark Tushnet, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law, Harvard Law School Any book by Keith Whittington is an important book, and this one is no exception. Facts matter and this book provides them. From now on, no discussion of the practice of judicial review can ignore its empirical findings. The most cynical political scientist will need to come to grips with its conclusion that 'the justices are not lapdogs, and they have often bitten the hand of the party that put them on the bench.' At the same time, idealists will need to incorporate its findings that the 'justices have proven themselves to be allies of [their] political coalition leaders.' Simply a must-read for any serious student of our Constitution and how it actually works. --Randy E. Barnett, director of the Georgetown Center for the Constitution; author of Our Republican Constitution: Securing the Liberty and Sovereignty of We the People Whittington here offers a thorough rejoinder to the often-repeated notion that the Supreme Court's exercise of judicial review is counter majoritarian. He also offers novel and thought-provoking analyses of famous cases, placing them in new light. There may be no better time to seek a fuller understanding of how judicial independence (whether in the form of activism or otherwise) can arise in different forms. Whittington's book is sure to inform those discussions. Highly recommended. --Choice As contemporary judicial selection politics amplify the urgency of discussions regarding judicial activism, the Court's legitimacy, and the relationship between party and judicial office, Whittington's study reminds readers that the Supreme Court has long acted as a nation-builder and an arm of the national state, operating within partisan politics. In stressing 'the conditional quality of judicial independence, ' Whittington offers the counsel of perspective on our current era of partisan polarization and strained inter-branch relations. --Nancy Maveety, author of Queen's Court: Judicial Power in the Rehnquist Era Keith Whittington's invaluable and comprehensive survey of Supreme Court decisions striking down&#mdash;and upholding--federal statutes carefully maps the complex relations between the Court and the political coalitions that produce, support, or sometimes abandon the laws the Court reviews. Bringing insights from American political development to bear, Whittington has supplanted Robert Dahl's classic work while preserving its core. Everyone interested in American political development and the Supreme Court must now take this work into account. --Mark Tushnet, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law, Harvard Law School Any book by Keith Whittington is an important book, and this one is no exception. Facts matter and this book provides them. From now on, no discussion of the practice of judicial review can ignore its empirical findings. The most cynical political scientist will need to come to grips with its conclusion that 'the justices are not lapdogs, and they have often bitten the hand of the party that put them on the bench.' At the same time, idealists will need to incorporate its findings that the 'justices have proven themselves to be allies of [their] political coalition leaders.' Simply a must-read for any serious student of our Constitution and how it actually works. --Randy E. Barnett, director of the Georgetown Center for the Constitution; author of Our Republican Constitution: Securing the Liberty and Sovereignty of We the People Author InformationKeith E. Whittington is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics at Princeton University. His many books include Political Foundations of Judicial Supremacy, Speak Freely, and, also from Kansas, Constitutional Interpretation. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |