9780147525277
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Dissent and the Supreme Court audiobook

  • By: Melvin I. Urofsky
  • Narrator: Dan Woren
  • Category: Law, Legal History
  • Length: 19 hours 22 minutes
  • Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
  • Publish date: January 01, 2015
  • Language: English
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Dissent and the Supreme Court Audiobook Summary

From the admired judicial authority, author of Louis D. Brandeis (“Remarkable”—Anthony Lewis, The New York Review of Books; “Monumental”—Alan M. Dershowitz, The New York Times Book Review), Division and Discord, and Supreme Decisions—Melvin Urofsky’s major new book looks at the role of dissent in the Supreme Court and the meaning of the Constitution through the greatest and longest lasting public-policy debate in the country’s history, among members of the Supreme Court, between the Court and the other branches of government, and between the Court and the people of the United States.
 
Urofsky writes of the necessity of constitutional dialogue as one of the ways in which we as a people reinvent and reinvigorate our democratic society. In Dissent and the Supreme Court, he explores the great dissents throughout the Court’s 225-year history. He discusses in detail the role the Supreme Court has played in helping to define what the Constitution means, how the Court’s majority opinions have not always been right, and how the dissenters, by positing alternative interpretations, have initiated a critical dialogue about what a particular decision should mean. This dialogue is sometimes resolved quickly; other times it may take decades before the Court adjusts its position. Louis Brandeis’s dissenting opinion about wiretapping became the position of the Court four decades after it was written. The Court took six decades to adopt the dissenting opinion of the first Justice John Harlan in Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)—that segregation on the basis of race violated the Constitution—in Brown v. Board of Education (1954).
 
Urofsky shows that the practice of dissent grew slowly but steadily and that in the nineteenth century dissents became more frequent. In the (in)famous case of Dred Scott v. Sanford (1857), Chief Justice Roger Taney’s opinion upheld slavery, declaring that blacks could never be citizens. The justice received intense condemnations from several of his colleagues, but it took a civil war and three constitutional amendments before the dissenting view prevailed and Dred Scott was overturned.
 
Urofsky looks as well at the many aspects of American constitutional life that were affected by the Earl Warren Court—free speech, race, judicial appointment, and rights of the accused—and shows how few of these decisions were unanimous, and how the dissents in the earlier cases molded the results of later decisions; how with Roe v. Wade—the Dred Scott of the modern era—dissent fashioned subsequent decisions, and how, in the Court, a dialogue that began with the dissents in Roe has shaped every decision since.
 
Urofsky writes of the rise of conservatism and discusses how the resulting appointments of more conservative jurists to the bench put the last of the Warren liberals—William Brennan and Thurgood Marshall—in increasingly beleaguered positions, and in the minority. He discusses the present age of incivility, in which reasoned dialogue seems less and less possible. Yet within the Marble Palace, the members of the Supreme Court continue to hear arguments, vote, and draft majority opinions, while the minority continues to “respectfully dissent.” The Framers understood that if a constitution doesn’t grow and adapt, it atrophies and dies, and if it does, so does the democratic society it has supported. Dissent—on the Court and off, Urofsky argues—has been a crucial ingredient in keeping the Constitution alive and must continue to be so.

(With black-and-white illustrations throughout.)

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Dissent and the Supreme Court Audiobook Narrator

Dan Woren is the narrator of Dissent and the Supreme Court audiobook that was written by Melvin I. Urofsky

About the Author(s) of Dissent and the Supreme Court

Melvin I. Urofsky is the author of Dissent and the Supreme Court

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Dissent and the Supreme Court Full Details

Narrator Dan Woren
Length 19 hours 22 minutes
Author Melvin I. Urofsky
Category
Publisher Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
Release date May 02, 2024
ISBN 9780147525277

Subjects

The publisher of the Dissent and the Supreme Court is Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group. includes the following subjects: new political books, sex, women, birth control, choice, left, health, medicine, parenting, politics, political books, political science books, political science, political philosophy, unplanned, pregnancy books, abortion, roe v wade, biography, supreme court justices, politics in america, american political thought, law books, justice, american politics, us government, government, american government, constitutional law, law, supreme court, supreme court books, the supreme court, dissent, supreme court cases, gerrymandering, Law, Legal History, Law, Courts, Political Science, American Government, Judicial Branch The BISAC Subject Code is Law, Legal History

Additional info

The publisher of the Dissent and the Supreme Court is Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group. The imprint is Random House Audio. It is supplied by Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group. The ISBN-13 is 9780147525277.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

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