Common Law Liberty
Rethinking American Constitutionalism
James R. Stoner, Jr.
June 2003
208 pages, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-1248-2, $29.95
James
Stoners first book, Common Law and Liberal Theory: Coke,
Hobbes, and the Origins of American Constitutionalism, was hailed
as forceful and wise . . . powerful and convincing by
the American Historical Review and a stunning achievement
by the Journal of Politics. In that work, which provided
historical background to the Founding era, he focused on the common
law almost exclusively as a mode of legal thought. He now amplifies
and extends his thinking on this subject with a study that transcends
such formalistic limits and reveals how constitutional
law has developed since the Founding.
Common Law Liberty is a rediscovery and reassertion of the
common laws central contributions to and enduring impact on
American constitutional law. Stoner illuminates the common laws
ties to an entire way of life, inextricably linked to the Founding
and American constitutionalism, influenced by Christianity, closely
connected to the development of free enterprise, and open to the
influences of modern science and democracy.
Stoner delineates two common laws: one understood by the Founders
and rooted in British traditions of jurisprudence and one that,
thanks to jurists like Holmes and Cardozo, corrupted the first by
redefining common law as mere judge-made law or judicial
process, dangerously disconnected from the values and norms
of the communities it serves. The latter, for Stoner, has been a
disastrous development, shrouding the common laws original
meaning and vitality, replacing its spirited liberty with personal
license, giving far too much discretion to judges who wish to depart
from tradition and precedent, and, thus, undermining our constitutional
system of checks-and-balances.
In an era as morally confused as ours, Stoner argues, we at least
ought to know what weve abandoned or suppressed in the name
of judicial activism and the modern rights-oriented Constitution.
Having lost our way, perhaps the common law, in its original sense,
provides a way back, a viable alternative to the debilitating relativism
of our current age.
Drawing upon themes from his first book, as well as numerous articles,
papers, and lectures produced during the past decade, Stoner crystallizes
and reintegrates this body of work. By applying and contrasting
both understandings of the common law to specific cases--including
free speech, abortion, and religious liberty--he hopes to reclaim
essential principles long buried but, in his view, desperately needed
to preserve the integrity of our nations polity and its hold
on our moral imagination.
Stoner understands the common law mind-set better than
anyone. In reminding us of the value of that mostly lost tradition
and (paradoxically) of how its remnants still shape legal decision
making, he performs an extremely valuable service. A subtle, engaging,
and insightful book.--Robert F. Nagel, author of
Judicial Power and American Character
James Stoner again shows in Common Law Liberty why
he is the preeminent expositor and proponent of common law
thinking among contemporary political scientists.--Christopher
Wolfe, author of The Rise of Modern Judicial Review
A provocative challenge to contemporary legal and constitutional
orthodoxy.--Keith Whittington, author of Constitutional
Interpretation: Textual Meaning, Original Intent, and Judicial
Review
JAMES R. STONER, JR., is associate professor of political
science at Louisiana State University and author of Common
Law and Liberal Theory: Coke, Hobbes, and the Origins of American
Constitutionalism. During the 20022003 academic year
he is a Visiting Fellow in the James Madison Program in American
Ideals and Institutions in the Department of Politics at Princeton
University.
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