The hollow hope : can courts bring about social change?
著者
書誌事項
The hollow hope : can courts bring about social change?
(American politics and political economy)
University of Chicago, 1991
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注記
Includes bibliographical references (p. 367-414) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Liberals have acclaimed, and conservatives decried, reliance on courts as tools for changes. But while debate rages over whether the courts "should" be playing such a legislative role, Gerald N. Rosenberg poses a far more fundamental question "can" courts produce political and social reform?
Rosenberg presents, with remarkable skill, an overwhelming case that efforts to use the courts to generate significant reforms in civil rights, abortion, and women's rights were largely failures.
"The real strength of "The Hollow Hope" . . . is its resuscitation of American Politics the old-fashioned representative kind as a valid instrument of social change. Indeed, the flip side of Mr. Rosenberg's argument that courts don't do all that much is the refreshing view that politics in the best sense of the word as deliberation and choice over economic and social changes, as well as over moral issues is still the core of what makes America the great nation it is. . . . A book worth reading." Gary L. McDowell, "The Washington Times"
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