The Tenth Amendment and State Sovereignty: Constitutional History and Contemporary Issues
By (Author) Mark R. Killenbeck
Contributions by Willaim E. Leuchtenburg
Contributions by Jack N. Rakove
Contributions by John Choon Yoo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
22nd December 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Central / national / federal government
Regional, state and other local government
342.73042
Paperback
224
Width 146mm, Height 229mm, Spine 12mm
277g
In the wake of the 2000 Election, the relationship between the Supreme Court and the American states has become more important. Once derided by the Supreme Court as a truism, the Tenth Amendment has in recent years been transformed from a neglected provision into a vital first principle. As such, it has provided the foundation for a series of decisions in which the Supreme Court has elevated the status of the states, often at the expense of federal power and in the face of previously settled assumptions. In this important volume, four prominent scholars - two historians and two law professors - examine carefully one of the central tenets in the Supreme Court's recent Tenth Amendment jurisprudence: the assumption that the results fashioned by a narrow majority are compelled by history and consistent with the intentions of the framers. They shed important new light on a series of decisions that mark a major change in our thinking about the nature of a constitutional system within which both the federal government and the states properly regard themselves as sovereign entities.
These historical analyses allow readers to orient themselves with respect to the controversy and to move toward a personal conclusion with respect to the relative rights and powers of the national and state governments. Not surprisingly historians and legal scholars can be satisfied that these explain the recently emerged federalism questions. * Law and Politics Book Review *
Mark R. Killenbeck is Wylie H. Davis Professor of Law at the University of Arkansas.