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Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil

Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil

Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil

Mark A. Graber, University of Maryland, College Park
June 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521728577

    Dred Scott and the Problem of Constitutional Evil , first published in 2006, concerns what is entailed by pledging allegiance to a constitutional text and tradition saturated with concessions to evil. The Constitution of the United States was originally understood as an effort to mediate controversies between persons who disputed fundamental values, and did not offer a vision of the good society. In order to form a 'more perfect union' with slaveholders, late-eighteenth-century citizens fashioned a constitution that plainly compelled some injustices and was silent or ambiguous on other questions of fundamental right. This constitutional relationship could survive only as long as a bisectional consensus was required to resolve all constitutional questions not settled in 1787. Dred Scott challenges persons committed to human freedom to determine whether antislavery northerners should have provided more accommodations for slavery than were constitutionally strictly necessary or risked the enormous destruction of life and property that preceded Lincoln's new birth of freedom.

    • New interpretation of antebellum constitutional law and politics
    • Challenges conventional wisdom on purpose of constitutionalism
    • Cutting edge law, political science, and history

    Product details

    June 2008
    Paperback
    9780521728577
    280 pages
    235 × 154 × 16 mm
    0.41kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. The Lessons of Dred Scott:
    • 1. The Dred Scott decision
    • 2. Critiques of Dred Scott
    • 3. Critiquing the critiques
    • 4. Injustice and constitutional law
    • Part II. The Constitutional Politics of Slavery:
    • 5. The slavery compromises revisited
    • 6. The compromises and constitutional development
    • 7. The constitutional order modified:
    • 1820–60
    • 8. The constitution and the Civil War
    • Part III. Compromising with Evil:
    • 9. Majoritarianism and constitutional evil
    • 10. Contract, consent, and constitutional evil
    • 11. Constitutional relationships and constitutional evil
    • Part IV. Voting for John Bell:
    • 12. Lincoln v. Bell
    • 13. Constitutional justice or constitutional peace.
      Author
    • Mark A. Graber , University of Maryland, College Park

      Mark A. Graber is a Professor of Government at the University of Maryland College Park and a Professor of Law at the University of Maryland School of Law. He previously taught law and political science at the University of Texas. He is the author of Transforming Free Speech (1991), Rethinking Abortion (1996), and numerous articles on American constitutional development, law and politics. His many awards include the Edward Corwin Prize (best dissertation), the Hughes Goessart Prize (best article in the Journal of the History of the Supreme Court), and the Congressional Quarterly Prize (best published article on public law). He is a member of the American Political Science Association and the American Association of Law Schools. During the 2005–6 academic year, he was head of the Law and Courts section of the American Political Science Association.