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Property Rights: From Magna Carta to the Fourteenth Amendment (New Studies in Social Policy, 3) - Hardcover

 
9780765800572: Property Rights: From Magna Carta to the Fourteenth Amendment (New Studies in Social Policy, 3)
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Críticas:
-Siegan's life work has been to make a historical and legal case to extend economic liberties, including the rights of ownership. He makes his case brilliantly in this book.- --Liberty -Beginning with their English roots in the Magna Carta, the author documents the views of various British thinkers such as John Locke, William Balckstone, and Lord Coke, clarifying how their views on property rights influenced American law and the constitutional framers such as James Madison. The book moves from Colonial experiences to analysis of the various ways the Constitution, including the 5th and 14th Amendments, and state contitutions have defended property rights against goverment action....Suitable to augment collections on American law, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and American history.- --Choice "Beginning with their English roots in the Magna Carta, the author documents the views of various British thinkers such as John Locke, William Balckstone, and Lord Coke, clarifying how their views on property rights influenced American law and the constitutional framers such as James Madison. The book moves from Colonial experiences to analysis of the various ways the Constitution, including the 5th and 14th Amendments, and state contitutions have defended property rights against goverment action....Suitable to augment collections on American law, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and American history." --Choice "Siegan's life work has been to make a historical and legal case to extend economic liberties, including the rights of ownership. He makes his case brilliantly in this book." --Liberty
Reseña del editor:
Property Rights: From Magna Carta to the Fourteenth Amendment breaks new ground in our understanding of the genesis of property rights in the United States. According to the standard interpretation, echoed by as lofty an authority as Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun, the courts did little in the way of protecting property rights in the early years of our nation. Not only does Siegan find this accepted teaching erroneous, but he finds post-Colonial jurisprudence to be firmly rooted in English common law and the writings of its most revered interpreters. Siegan conducts an exhaustive examination of property rights cases decided by state courts between the time of the ratification of the U.S. Constitution in 1788 and the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868. This inventory, which in its sweep captures scores of cases overlooked by previous commentators on the history of property rights, reveals that the protection of these rights is neither a relatively new phenomenon nor a heritage with precarious pedigree. These court cases, as well as early state constitutions, consistently and repeatedly embraced key elements of a property rights jurisprudence, such as protection of the privileges and immunities of citizens, due process of law, equal protection under the law, and prohibitions on the taking of property without just compensation. Case law provides overwhelming evidence that the American legal system, from its inception, has held property rights and their protection in the highest regard.The American Revolution, Siegan reminds us, was fought largely to affirm and protect private property rights-that is, to uphold the "rights of Englishmen"-even if it meant that the colonists would cease being Englishmen. John Locke and other great theoreticians of property rights understood their importance, not only to individuals who happened to possess property, but to the preservation of a free society and to the prosperity of its inhabitants. Siegan's contribution to this venerable tradition lies in his faithful reconstruction of our legal history, which allows us to see just how central property rights have been to the American experiment in liberty-from the very beginning.

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  • VerlagRoutledge
  • Erscheinungsdatum2001
  • ISBN 10 0765800578
  • ISBN 13 9780765800572
  • EinbandTapa dura
  • Auflage1
  • Anzahl der Seiten340

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