This book shines a powerful light on a fundamental constitutional right that the Supreme Court abandoned more than 70 years ago-the freedom of individuals to bargain over the terms of their own contracts. Vital to economic a...

Buy Now From Amazon

This book shines a powerful light on a fundamental constitutional right that the Supreme Court abandoned more than 70 years ago-the freedom of individuals to bargain over the terms of their own contracts. Vital to economic and personal liberty, this right has been continuously diminished by the country's regulatory and welfare state. Beginning in 1897 with the Supreme Court's historic Lochner decision, the Court safeguarded this right for 40 years by declaring that laws that interfered with the freedom of people to bargain over the terms of their own contracts were unconstitutional. Then in 1937, as part of the New Deal, the Court abandoned its protection for the liberty of contract. This book rediscovers this lost right, identifying the foundations and nature of the Court's Lochner-era legal theories and decisions and shatters myths that scholars have created about this era and subject.

  • Used Book in Good Condition
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Similar Products

The Magic Mirror: Law in American HistoryDocuments of American Constitutional and Legal History: Volume 1: From the Founding to 1896 (Documents of American Constitutional & Legal History)Documents of American Constitutional And Legal History, Vol. 2 From 1896 To the PresentRehabilitating Lochner: Defending Individual Rights against Progressive ReformScoring High on Bar Exam Essays: In-Depth Strategies and Essay-Writing That Bar Review Courses Don't Offer, with 80 Actual State Bar Exams Questions aRemedies, Cases and Problems, 5th (University Casebooks) (University Casebook Series)Slavery, Abortion, and the Politics of Constitutional MeaningLegislation and Statutory Interpretation, (Concepts and Insights)