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Constitutional theory

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Constitutional Law
of the United States of America
The constitutional structure
Civil Rights  · Federalism
Executive branch  · Separation of powers
Legislative branch  · Judiciary
Famous Cases
Marbury v. Madison
McCulloch v. Maryland  · Roe v. Wade
Dred Scott v. Sanford  · Lochner v. New York
Freedoms
Free speech  · Free_Exercise_Clause>Free exercise
Freedom of the press  · Right to privacy
Theory
Constitutional theory  · Judicial review

Constitutional theory is an area of constitutional law that focuses on the underpinnings of constitutional government in the United States. It overlaps with legal theory and democratic theory.

Overview

Constitutional theory is primarily an academic discipline that focuses on the meaning of the United States Constitution. Its concerns include (but are not limited to) the historical, linguistic, sociological, ethical, and political.

Much of constitutional theory is concerned with theories of judicial review.[[Citing sources citation needed]] This is in part because Marbury v. Madison, which established this judicial power in the early 19th century,[[Citing sources citation needed]] has giving the judiciary near-final authority on constitutional meaning.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Aside from judicial review, consitutional theory in general seeks to ask and answer the following questions:

History of Constitutional Theory

Although constitutional theory as a discipline has its precursors in The Federalist and Justice Story's Commentaries on the Constitution, modern constitutional theory began with the publication of Alexander Bickel's The Least Dangerous Branch. (The title is an allusion to The Federalist, in which Alexander Hamilton wrote that the judiciary was the least dangerous of the three branches because it had neither the sword (like the Executive) nor the purse (like the Legislature). The book's primary (but not sole) contribution was to introduce the idea of the "countermajoritarian difficulty." The idea expressed by the term countermajoritarian difficulty is that there is a tension between democratic government (as he defines it democratic government is majoritarian government) and judicial power. If the judiciary--an unelected branch of government--can overturn popular legislation, then either there is a fundamental contradiction within the democractic system, or there is a tension that must be resolved by curbing judicial power. (One of Bickel's solutions is for the Court to exercise "the passive virtues": that is, to decline to decide more than it has to decide.)

Modern constitutional theory owed much to Bickel's thinking, and much that has been written has had to grapple with the idea of the "countermajoritarian difficulty" in some way.[[Citing sources citation needed]]

Important thinkers

The following is a partial list:

References

External links

Law

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Adjudication Public law (Criminal law | Constitutional law | Administrative law)
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See also:List of areas of law

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