When the ideas of the founding period of the American republic have been studied by legal scholars, they have tended to approach that inquiry from a particular perspective. They have begun by positing a set of ideas as central to the interpretation of the United States Constitution over the course of its history, and have then proceeded to examine the status of those ideas in the founding period against the backdrop of their subsequent development over more than two centuries. This posture toward the ideas of the framing, I will be arguing, has produced two distorting effects on their recovery. The first effect has been to overstate the significance of some constitutional ideas with which later generations of Americans have been preoccupied; the second has been to understate the special importance attached to other ideas of the founders.Image Credit: William Howard Taft's Official Portrait
Friday, June 26, 2009
White Revisits the Ideas of the Founding
G. Edward White, University of Virginia School of Law, has posted Revisiting the Ideas of the Founding, which is based on his 2008 Taft Lecture at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. It will appear in the June 2009 issue of the University of Cincinnati Law Review. Here’s the abstract: