Freedom and the Court
Civil Rights and Liberties in the United States
Eighth Edition
Henry J. Abraham and Barbara A. Perry
September 2003
552 pages, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1262-8, $29.95
Since
its original publication in 1967, Freedom and the Court has
become the standard text on civil liberties law, with more than
100,000 copies in print. This classic is now updated to cover Supreme
Court decisions through 2003 and address essential questions of
how to reconcile civil libertiesespecially personal privacywith
national security in the aftermath of 9/11.
Henry J. Abraham and Barbara A. Perry continue to portray the intriguing
human stories behind landmark constitutional law cases as they focus
on fundamental issues of individual rights relating to freedom of
religion, separation of church and state, freedom of expression,
due process, and political, racial, and gender equality. This eighth
edition of Freedom and the Court delineates recent pathbreaking
developments by the Rehnquist Court in civil rights regarding abortion,
affirmative action, capital punishment, computers and the Internet,
and the Americans with Disabilities Act. It also analyzes the narrowly
divided Courts controversial return to a more state-centered
jurisprudence and to certain preNew Deal, pro-business commitments.
The books coverage ranges widely to consider criminal rights
in light of the 1990s war on crime, free speech cases involving
everything from campaign finance to nude dancing, and equal protection
pertaining not only to minority litigation but also to the Bush
v. Gore decisionwhose first oral argument (for the Palm
Beach County case) the authors attended at the U.S. Supreme Court.
It also explains the ongoing impact of the Courts invalidation
of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993, and it continues
to include comprehensive charts for cases involving freedom of religion,
separation of church and state, and gender that are unmatched by
any other book.
Impeccably researched and enormously readable, Freedom and the
Court remains the basic work in the field and is indispensable
to the teaching of civil liberties. As the Supreme Court is called
upon to act as the nations constitutional conscience in deciding
pressing conflicts regarding terrorism and liberty, it is an essential
text and reference for all who would better understand its decisions.
This comprehensive and up-to-date text is timely and absorbing
reading for student, scholar, and layperson alike. Abraham and
Perry have done it again!--Sheldon Goldman, author
of Picking Federal Judges
Concise yet amazingly comprehensive, Freedom and the Court
remains the best text in the field. A wonderful introduction to
the fascinating world of civil liberties for students, a superb
desk reference for their professors!--Tinsley E. Yarbrough,
author of The Rehnquist Court and the Constitution
Freedom and the Court is the best one-book tool available
for mastering the Supreme Courts civil rights and liberties
jurisprudence.--Martin M. Shapiro, author of Who
Guards the Guardians: Judicial Control of Administration
HENRY J. ABRAHAM is James Hart Professor Emeritus of Government
and Foreign Affairs at the University of Virginia whose numerous
books include Justices, Presidents, and Senators: A History of
the U.S. Supreme Court Appointments from Washington to Clinton
and The Judicial Process: An Introductory Analysis of the Courts
of the United States, England, and France. BARBARA A. PERRY
is Carter Glass Professor of Government at Sweet Briar College
and author of The Priestly Tribe: The Supreme Courts Image
in the American Mind.
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