Common Law and Liberal Theory
Coke, Hobbes, and the Origins of American Constitutionalism
James R. Stoner, Jr.
286 pages, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0630-6, $19.95
James Stoner's purpose is an ambitious
one: to recover the common law basis of American constitutionalism.
American constitutionalism in general, he argues, and judicial
review in particular, cannot be fully understood without acknowledging
their roots in both common law and liberal political theory.
But for the most part, the common law underpinnings of constitutionalism
have received short shrift.
Through close study of liberal political philosopher Thomas
Hobbes and the writings of Edward Coke, a seventeenth-century
judge and parliamentarian whose opinion in Doctor Bonham's
Case (1610) was once viewed as a precedent for the modern
practice of judicial review, Stoner establishes a dialogue between
two schools of thought. The contrast that emerges between liberalism,
with its scientific ambitions, and common law opens up a fresh
perspective on the foundations of the American regime.
Common law is grounded in precedent and local tradition as
well as reason; it stresses community. Liberal political theory
is based on abstract, rational principles; it stresses individualism.
To overlook the common law roots of American constitutionalism,
then, is to ignore a tradition that is more contextual and historical,
more flexible yet more respectful of the wisdom of tradition
or experience, less individualistic and more emphatic about responsibility
than is the liberal philosophic tradition.
In Common Law and Liberal Theory, Stoner reexamines
the sources of judicial review and the American founding. He
focuses on Hobbes and Coke as representative of the two traditions,
but also includes chapters on Locke, Montesquieu, Blackstone,
and the Federalists. His careful reading of the influences of
and conflicts between liberalism and common law will cast new
light on the controversy over the origins of American constitutionalism.
"This book is based on impressively wide and deep erudition.
The style is lucid and graceful, often witty. . . . [It] will
stir reconsideration of a neglected and important dimension of
the history of modern political thought and the intellectual
background to the American Constitution."--Thomas Pangle,
author of The Spirit of Modern Republicanism: The Moral Vision
of the American Founders and the Philosophy of Locke
"Stoner has a breathtaking grasp of the powerful thinkers
whose works he surveys, and a sharp focus of his own which pulls
the material together. . . . A major contribution to several
ongoing debates in academic circles. This is 'a whale of a book'
(pun intended)."--Robert Lowry Clinton, author of
Marbury v. Madison and Judicial Review
"Stoner has immersed himself in the thought and practice
of the common law and in early liberal political thought, and
he opens new vistas for modern readers on each of them and on
the sometimes fruitful tension between them. This is an invaluable
book for those who wish to understand these essential elements
of the very foundation of our Constitution and polity."--Christopher
Wolfe, author of The Rise of Modern Judicial Review: From
Constitutional Interpretation to Judge-Made Law
"Forceful and wise. Stoner suggests that American constitutionalism
is the product of a strange mixture of two opposing schools of
thought: the English common law tradition as exemplified by the
work of Edward Coke and early liberal political philosophy as
seen in the work of Thomas Hobbes. His argument is powerful and
convincing."--Journal of American History
"Stoner effectively addresses the badly neglected question
of what we expect of judges in a political system that rests
on popular sovereignty and a legal order committed to the idea
of fundamental law. This is a welcome addition to the literature
that offers a fresh perspective, for we have something to learn
about the beginnings of judicial review by seeing it within the
common law tradition."--American Political Science
Review
"The origin, nature, and validity of judicial review
in American politics have for years been debated not only in
modern political science but in legal scholarship as well as
judicial politics. With this book, Stoner moves the debate to
a new, and indeed higher, plane. . . . It's a stunning achievement."--Journal
of Politics
JAMES R. STONER, JR., is associate professor of political
science at Louisiana State University and author of Common
Law Liberty: Rethinking 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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