This book examines the constitutional protection of economic rights through the nineteenth century and the first three decades of the twentieth.The authors grapple with such questions as: how should the commerce clause be interpreted? To what extent did the historical development of eminent domain law depart from the "rhetoric" of takings jurisprudence? How was the Constitution connected to economic growth in the nineteenth century? What was the effect of the post-/civil War constitutional amendments? How did the right to contract affect government attempts to balance private rights with the public good? What was the reaction of leading constitutional theorists to the dominance of a laissez-fair philosophy in the Court and the nation at the turn of the century?
Ellen Frankel Paul is Deputy Director of the Social Philosophy and Policy Center and Professor of Political Science at Bowling Green State University. Howard Dickman is a Research Associate at the Social Philosophy and Policy Center at Bowling Green State University. They are coeditors of Liberty, Property, and the Foundations of the American Constitution published by SUNY Press.
AcknowledgmentsIntroductionLochner and Company: Revisionism RevisitedMARY CORNELIA PORTERHolmes, Brandeis, and Pound: Sociological Jurisprudence as a Response to Economic Laissez-FairePAUL L. MURPHYEvolving Conceptions of 'Property' and 'Liberty' in Due Process JurisprudenceGLEN O. ROBINSONThe Proper Scope of the Commerce PowerRICHARD A. EPSTEINEconomic Liberty, Antitrust, and the Constitution, 1880-1925TONY FREYERThe Jurisprudence—and Mythology—of Eminent Domain in American Legal HistoryHARRY N. SCHEIBERRepublicanism, Railroads, and Nineteenth-Century Midwestern ConstitutionalismALAN JONESUp from Dred Scott; Down to Slaughterhouse: Inventive Interim Judicial Protections for Property in Reconstruction AmericaHAROLD M. HYMANContributorsIndex