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Book Review
A People's History of the Supreme Court. By Peter Irons. (New York: Viking, 1999. xviii, 542 pp. $32.95, isbn 0-670-87006-4.)
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In A People's History of the Supreme Court, Peter Irons, a political activist and scholar, focuses upon the human beings involved in some eighty-five decisions of the Supreme Court. Seeking to provide models for his readers to emulate, he acknowledges a personal and professional indebtedness to Howard Zinn, who contributes a foreword. |
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After getting the Constitution and Bill of Rights in place, Irons draws out the human dramas involved as individuals contend for their rights. He believes that the Constitution is a flexible document within which the justices have wide-ranging discretion, along with an obligation, to interpret the fundamental law to promote the dignity of the individual. |
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This review proceeds on the assumption that a viable history of the Court could be written by focusing largely on human rights cases dealing with race, class, and gender, by highlighting the litigants involved in the key cases, and by taking such an expansive view of the Court's proper role. Granting this much, Irons's treatment still is disappointing. |
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