Law School for Everyone

Constitutional Law

Published April 26, 2019 by The Great Courses.

ASIN:
1629977160

Americans wage many of today's fiercest policy debates and culture wars as battles over constitutional meaning. It's because constitutional law is so fundamental to our democracy that law schools across the country teach the subject. It's the area of law that determines what federal and state governments are permitted to do, and what rights you have as an individual citizen of the United States.

In these 12 lectures, you'll get the same accessible, well-rounded introduction to constitutional law as a typical law student—but with the added benefit of noted constitutional scholar Eric Berger's brilliant insights. Taking you through all three branches of the federal government, Professor Berger uses some of the most important legal cases in the United States to probe the open-ended nature of the Constitution's language and illustrate how legal reasoning has defined the power relationships that the Constitution governs.

You'll examine pivotal Supreme Court cases …

3 editions

A Good But Dated Overview

Berger reviews the standard neoliberal-era interpretation of the Constitution and related major cases in the Supreme Court, albeit with very limited coverage of the most glaring miscarriages of justice. This is still useful if you're unfamiliar with this reading, as it shows how far the modern court has moved from these basic tenets. The surface level history here is problematic, as Berger is unwilling to confront or analyze the depths to which Native American dispossession, slavery, and white supremacy more broadly has been baked into the Constitution and related jurisprudence. It's also notable how dated these not-particularly-old lectures feel given how the current administration and Supreme Court go against nearly everything discussed here. One hopes this will once again be useful in the future

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