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The Nature of Rights at the American Founding and Beyond

Amar, Akhil Reed(Contributions by)Hutson, James H.(Contributions by)Macedo, Stephen(Contributions by)Primus, Richard A.(Contributions by)Rakove, Jack N.(Contributions by)Reid, John Phillip(Contributions by)Rodgers, Daniel T.(Contributions by)Roeber, A. G.(Contributions by)Shain, Barry Alan(Contributions by)Shain, Barry Alan(Edited by)
Part of the Constitutionalism and Democracy series
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Americans have been claiming and defending rights since long before the nation achieved independence.

But few Americans recognize how profoundly the nature of rights has changed over the past three hundred years.

In "The Nature of Rights at the American Founding and Beyond", Barry Alan Shain gathers together essays by some of the leading scholars in American constitutional law and history to examine the nature of rights claims in eighteenth-century America and how they differed, if at all, from today's understandings.

Was at its founding predominantly individualistic or, in some important way, communal?

Similarly, which understanding of rights was of greater centrality: the historical "rights of Englishmen" or abstract natural rights? And who enjoyed these rights, however understood? Everyone? Or only economically privileged and militarily responsible male heads of households?The contributors also consider how such concepts of rights have continued to shape and reshape the American experience of political liberty to this day. Beginning with the arresting transformation in the grounding of rights prompted by the American War of Independence, the volume moves through what the contributors describe as the "Founders' Bill of Rights" to the "second" Bill of Rights that coincided with the Civil War, and ends with the language of rights erupting from the horrors of the Second World War and its aftermath in the Cold War.

By asking what kind of nation the founding generation left us, or intended to leave us, the contributors are then able to compare that nation to the nation we have become.

Most, if not all, of the essays demonstrate that the nature of rights in America has been anything but constant, and that the rights defended in the late eighteenth century stand at some distance from those celebrated today.

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Product Details
University of Virginia Press
0813926661 / 9780813926667
Hardback
29/11/2007
United States
352 pages
156 x 235 mm
Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More