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The Constitution and Race
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Table of Contents

Preface Introduction Constitutional Law and Slavery Toward a More Perfect Union Constitutional Amendment and Doctrinal Development Separate But Equal Desegregation and the Anti-Discrimination Principle Color Blindness Revisited Original Imperatives and Doctrinal Possibility Bibliography Index

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...An incredibly comprehensive yet concise political and legal history of race and the U.S. Constitution...Extensive endnotes and bibliography make this work a must for libraries of all types. Choice

About the Author

DONALD E. LIVELY is a Professor of Law at the University of Toledo College of Law. He is the author of Modern Communications Law (Praeger, 1991) and Essential Principles of Communications Law (Praeger, 1991).

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"Lively has written an incredibly comprehensive yet concise political and legal history of race and the US Constitution. Ranging through the compromises on race at the 1787 Philadelphia Constitutional Convention, the Missouri Compromise, the infamous Dred Scott and Plessy cases to Brown and the most recent Supreme Court retrenchments on civil rights, Lively analyzes the "history of doctrinal potential and incomplete actualization" which is civil rights in the US. If the late 1960s and early 1970s represented a coming together of Congress and the courts in the name of civil rights, the last 15 years have seen a reversal of fortune as a result of greater public opposition and court-interpreted constitutional doctrines that are cramped and ill-suited to modern forms of discrimination. Throughout, Lively finds that remedies are consistently "implemented in terms that accommodate majoritarian priorities" and have resulted in the bizarre situation that "the harshest standard of [constitutional] review . . . has been reserved primarily for constitutional claims by the dominant racial group." The author proposes a "jurisprudence of original design" which would use a sliding scale of scrutiny such that remedial actions are examined less strictly than those that continue racial inequality and injustice. Extensive endnotes and bibliography make this work a must for libraries of all types."-Choice

?Lively has written an incredibly comprehensive yet concise political and legal history of race and the US Constitution. Ranging through the compromises on race at the 1787 Philadelphia Constitutional Convention, the Missouri Compromise, the infamous Dred Scott and Plessy cases to Brown and the most recent Supreme Court retrenchments on civil rights, Lively analyzes the "history of doctrinal potential and incomplete actualization" which is civil rights in the US. If the late 1960s and early 1970s represented a coming together of Congress and the courts in the name of civil rights, the last 15 years have seen a reversal of fortune as a result of greater public opposition and court-interpreted constitutional doctrines that are cramped and ill-suited to modern forms of discrimination. Throughout, Lively finds that remedies are consistently "implemented in terms that accommodate majoritarian priorities" and have resulted in the bizarre situation that "the harshest standard of [constitutional] review . . . has been reserved primarily for constitutional claims by the dominant racial group." The author proposes a "jurisprudence of original design" which would use a sliding scale of scrutiny such that remedial actions are examined less strictly than those that continue racial inequality and injustice. Extensive endnotes and bibliography make this work a must for libraries of all types.?-Choice

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