The least dangerous branch : separation of powers and court-packing
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The least dangerous branch : separation of powers and court-packing
(The Supreme Court in American society : equal justice under law / series editor, Kermit L. Hall, 5)(A Garland series)
Garland Pub., 2000
Available at / 17 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Available as a single volume or as part of the 10 volume set Supreme Court in American Society
Table of Contents
- The Supreme Court and the Political Question: Affirmation or Abdication? *
- Constitution, Congress, and Court: On the Theory, Law, and Politics of Appellate Jurisdiction of the United States Supreme Court
- Can a President Pack-Or Draft-The Supreme Court? FDR and the Court in the Great Depression and World War II
- Reneging on History? Playing the Court/Congress/President Civil Rights Game
- Constraining "The Least Dangerous Branch": The Tradition of Attacks on Judicial Power
- The Supreme Court under the Judiciary Act of 1925
- The Origins of Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Court-Packing" Plan
- Court-Curbing Periods in American History
- The President and the Court: Reinterpreting the Court-packing Episode of 1937
- Reflections on the Separation of Powers and Judicial Review at the End of the Reagan Era
- Unfulfilled Aspirations: The Court-Packing Efforts of Presidents Reagan and Bush
by "Nielsen BookData"