"A rich source of information and ideas....Worthwhile not only because, as history, it provides an excellent introduction to some of the most influential American judges and cases, but also because as theory it, like all good books, provokes as many questions as it resolves."--Administrative Law Review
Praise for the first edition:
"Among the important books, The American Judicial Tradition deserves a prominent place....In an era of growing concern about the 'imperial judiciary,' it merits the serious reader's attention."--Jethro Lieberman, The New York Times Book Review
"A scholarly, well-informed, illuminating work that penetrates the mystique of the judicial mantle....White has superbly conveyed the morality of one of our most sacred institutions."--Trial Magazine
"White's tracing of the varieties of American judicial experience is a dazzling performance, one of the more illuminating essays in American political history that I have read."--Louis S. Auchincloss
"The single most helpful study of the American judiciary, and a brilliant essay on one of the most crucial institutions of our first 200 years."--Stanley Katz
"The book flows well. The selection of representative judges is rational. The biographical essays are done well. I recommend the book to those interested in the theory of appellate judging."--Merritt Lane, Jr., American Bar Association Journal
"An excellent work....A tour de force....As a concise, clearly articulated overview of the American judicial tradition, as a guide to the further study of judicial biography and American jurisprudence, the work is unrivalled."--CHOICE
"An outstanding book which reveals White as a major scholar on American jurisprudence....A major contribution to understanding the judicial process as it operates in the context of a changing nation."--Journal of American History
"No one can read this book without being vastly better informed, and it is so refreshing to read a critique of a long established institution which, without ignoring its defects, brings out its abiding strength."--Law Quarterly Review
"White has written a thoughtful and often provocative work that both synthesizes many recent contributions and suggests further lines of inquiry."--American Historical Review
"White...has written a superb book. [It] merits that expansive adjective on a host of counts....Few scholars are as well prepared and qualified as White to write about the nation's judicial tradition from such a perspective....He points with insight, clarity, and economy of language to the essentials of American judging."--Virginia Law Review

Now available in a newly revised and updated edition, this highly acclaimed volume presents a series of portraits of the most famous appellate judges in American history from John Marshall to the Burger court.
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This expanded edition of White's highly acclaimed study of the most famous appellate judges in American history from John Marshall to Warren Burger contains a new preface, an updated bibliographical note, and two new chapters, one on Justice William O. Douglas and one on the Burger Court.
Les mer
"A rich source of information and ideas....Worthwhile not only because, as history, it provides an excellent introduction to some of the most influential American judges and cases, but also because as theory it, like all good books, provokes as many questions as it resolves."--Administrative Law Review Praise for the first edition: "Among the important books, The American Judicial Tradition deserves a prominent place....In an era of growing concern about the 'imperial judiciary,' it merits the serious reader's attention."--Jethro Lieberman, The New York Times Book Review "A scholarly, well-informed, illuminating work that penetrates the mystique of the judicial mantle....White has superbly conveyed the morality of one of our most sacred institutions."--Trial Magazine "White's tracing of the varieties of American judicial experience is a dazzling performance, one of the more illuminating essays in American political history that I have read."--Louis S. Auchincloss "The single most helpful study of the American judiciary, and a brilliant essay on one of the most crucial institutions of our first 200 years."--Stanley Katz "The book flows well. The selection of representative judges is rational. The biographical essays are done well. I recommend the book to those interested in the theory of appellate judging."--Merritt Lane, Jr., American Bar Association Journal "An excellent work....A tour de force....As a concise, clearly articulated overview of the American judicial tradition, as a guide to the further study of judicial biography and American jurisprudence, the work is unrivalled."--CHOICE "An outstanding book which reveals White as a major scholar on American jurisprudence....A major contribution to understanding the judicial process as it operates in the context of a changing nation."--Journal of American History "No one can read this book without being vastly better informed, and it is so refreshing to read a critique of a long established institution which, without ignoring its defects, brings out its abiding strength."--Law Quarterly Review "White has written a thoughtful and often provocative work that both synthesizes many recent contributions and suggests further lines of inquiry."--American Historical Review "White...has written a superb book. [It] merits that expansive adjective on a host of counts....Few scholars are as well prepared and qualified as White to write about the nation's judicial tradition from such a perspective....He points with insight, clarity, and economy of language to the essentials of American judging."--Virginia Law Review
Les mer
"A dazzling performance." --Louis S. Auchincloss, (on the first edition)
G. Edward White is John B. Minor Professor of Law and History at the University of Virginia and is the author of six books, including Patterns of American Legal Thought, Tort Law in America: An Intellectual History, Earl Warren: A Public Life, and The Marshall Court and Cultural Change, 1815-1835.
Les mer
"A dazzling performance." --Louis S. Auchincloss, (on the first edition)

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780195056853
Publisert
1989
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Inc
Vekt
599 gr
Høyde
205 mm
Bredde
128 mm
Dybde
35 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
576

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

G. Edward White is John B. Minor Professor of Law and History at the University of Virginia and is the author of six books, including Patterns of American Legal Thought, Tort Law in America: An Intellectual History, Earl Warren: A Public Life, and The Marshall Court and Cultural Change, 1815-1835.