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Judicial Review and American Conservatism

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Judicial Review and American Conservatism Synopsis

The Christian Right of the 1980s forged its political identity largely in response to what it perceived as liberal 'judicial activism'. Robert Daniel Rubin tells this story as it played out in Mobile, Alabama. There, a community conflict pitted a group of conservative evangelicals, a sympathetic federal judge, and a handful of conservative intellectuals against a religious agnostic opposed to prayer in schools, and a school system accused of promoting a religion called 'secular humanism'. The twists in the Mobile conflict speak to the changes and continuities that marked the relationship of 1980s' religious conservatism to democracy, the courts, and the Constitution. By alternately focusing its gaze on the local conflict and related events in Washington, DC, this book weaves a captivating narrative. Historians, political scientists, and constitutional lawyers will find, in Rubin's study, a challenging new perspective on the history of the Christian Right in the United States.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781107060555
Publication date: 20th March 2017
Author: Robert Daniel Rubin
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 354 pages
Series: Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society
Genres: Judicial review
Right-of-centre democratic ideologies
Constitution: government and the state