The Evolving Constitution: How the Supreme Court Has Ruled on Issues from Abortion to ZoningRandom House, 1992 - 751 pages This unique one-volume guide to the Constitution of the United States is an easily accessible tour of the constitutional issues of the past and the present. Arranged alphabetically by topic, this essential reference contains over 1,200 lively essays which highlight background, history, and latest developments of each issue. Includes short biographies of every Supreme Court Justice, full text of the Constitution, and an index. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 78
Page 151
... holding in the opinion was that a section of the Judiciary Act of 1789 conflicted with Article III of the Constitution . Because the Court's holding did declaratory judgment A declaratory judg- ment determines the legal rights in a ...
... holding in the opinion was that a section of the Judiciary Act of 1789 conflicted with Article III of the Constitution . Because the Court's holding did declaratory judgment A declaratory judg- ment determines the legal rights in a ...
Page 245
... holding A holding is the precise ground on which a court decides a case - the reason for its DECISION . Any conclusions of law necessary to decide the case are part of its holding . Judicial PRECEDENT derives from the holdings of cases ...
... holding A holding is the precise ground on which a court decides a case - the reason for its DECISION . Any conclusions of law necessary to decide the case are part of its holding . Judicial PRECEDENT derives from the holdings of cases ...
Page 430
... Holding Company Act of 1935 , the par- ent holding companies of most of the nation's gas and electric utilities were required to regis- ter with the Securities and Exchange Commis- sion . In 1938 the Court upheld the registration ...
... Holding Company Act of 1935 , the par- ent holding companies of most of the nation's gas and electric utilities were required to regis- ter with the Securities and Exchange Commis- sion . In 1938 the Court upheld the registration ...
Contents
How to Use This Book 36 | 3 |
How the Supreme Court Hears and Decides Cases | 20 |
The Supreme Courts 199192 Term | 583 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
appeal Black Blackmun Brandeis Brennan Burger Chief Justice citizens civil rights Clark common law Concurrences Congress consti constitutionally conviction Court held Court struck crime criminal CURIAM decision declared defendant discrimination Dissents district doctrine DORMANT COMMERCE CLAUSE Douglas DUE PROCESS elected enacted EQUAL PROTECTION EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE example exclusionary rule executive federal courts federal government federal law Felix Frankfurter FIFTH AMENDMENT Fourteenth Amendment Fourth Amendment Frankfurter FREEDOM gress Harlan hearing Holmes Hugo L immunity interest interstate commerce issue Jackson John Marshall Harlan judges judicial jurisdiction jury Lawyer legislative legislature limited majority McReynolds ment Nominated by President O'Connor Oliver Wendell Holmes party permit person police political Powell prohibiting prosecution punishment racial ratified refused regulation Rehnquist religious rule Scalia Senate speech statute Stevens Stewart suit Supreme Court tion tional trial tutional unconstitutional United upheld violated voting Warren White
References to this book
Churchill's Horses and the Myths of American Corporations: Power ... Mord Bogie No preview available - 1998 |