Laboratory of Justice: The Supreme Court's 200-Year Struggle to Integrate Science and the LawMacmillan, 2005 M05 1 - 432 páginas From the American Revolution to the genetic revolution, to race and abortion rights, legal expert David L. Faigman’s Laboratory of Justice examines the U.S. Supreme Court’s uneasy attempts to weave science into the Constitution. |
Contenido
Dred Scott and the Biology | |
Slavery | |
Legal Realism | |
Race and Eugenics in the 1940s | |
Brown v Board of Education and | |
Privacy and the Problem | |
Equal Protection in the Land | |
Science | |
The Moral and Empirical Consequences | |
The Future | |
NOTES | |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Laboratory of Justice: The Supreme Court's 200-Year Struggle to Integrate ... David L. Faigman Vista previa limitada - 2004 |
Laboratory of Justice: The Supreme Court's 200-Year Struggle to Integrate ... David L. Faigman Sin vista previa disponible - 2005 |