With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom
A valuable resource for students, teachers, and citizens looking to better understand US Constitutional history

With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom is designed to help teachers and students generate analysis and debate in our nation's classrooms about an aspect of US history that has produced intense disagreements about rights and wrongs: constitutional history. For more than two centuries, Americans have argued about what the US Constitution permits or requires (or not), and what values and ideals it enshrines (or not)—indeed, who is to be included (or not) in the very definition of "We the People."

This book provides abundant resources to explore key moments of debate about the Constitution and its meaning, focusing on fundamental questions of citizenship and rights. It analyzes American history through the use and misuse of the Constitution over time, from early disputes about liberty and slavery to more recent quarrels over equality and dignity. With a foreword by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, this book's succinct and probing essays by prize-winning historians—including Linda Greenhouse, Mary Sarah Bilder, Annette Gordon-Reed, Eric Foner, Sam Erman, Julie Suk, Laura Kalman, and Melissa Murray—provide the core of the book. Their topics encompass woman suffrage, school desegregation, Japanese internment, McCarthyism, all dramatic turning points in American history. Carefully selected and annotated primary sources and focused discussion questions provide teachers with the tools to bring constitutional history into the classroom with ease.

As this book amply demonstrates, United States history is constitutional history. A companion website provides additional resources for teachers.
1140873195
With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom
A valuable resource for students, teachers, and citizens looking to better understand US Constitutional history

With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom is designed to help teachers and students generate analysis and debate in our nation's classrooms about an aspect of US history that has produced intense disagreements about rights and wrongs: constitutional history. For more than two centuries, Americans have argued about what the US Constitution permits or requires (or not), and what values and ideals it enshrines (or not)—indeed, who is to be included (or not) in the very definition of "We the People."

This book provides abundant resources to explore key moments of debate about the Constitution and its meaning, focusing on fundamental questions of citizenship and rights. It analyzes American history through the use and misuse of the Constitution over time, from early disputes about liberty and slavery to more recent quarrels over equality and dignity. With a foreword by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, this book's succinct and probing essays by prize-winning historians—including Linda Greenhouse, Mary Sarah Bilder, Annette Gordon-Reed, Eric Foner, Sam Erman, Julie Suk, Laura Kalman, and Melissa Murray—provide the core of the book. Their topics encompass woman suffrage, school desegregation, Japanese internment, McCarthyism, all dramatic turning points in American history. Carefully selected and annotated primary sources and focused discussion questions provide teachers with the tools to bring constitutional history into the classroom with ease.

As this book amply demonstrates, United States history is constitutional history. A companion website provides additional resources for teachers.
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With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom

With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom

With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom

With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom

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Overview

A valuable resource for students, teachers, and citizens looking to better understand US Constitutional history

With Liberty and Justice for All?: The Constitution in the Classroom is designed to help teachers and students generate analysis and debate in our nation's classrooms about an aspect of US history that has produced intense disagreements about rights and wrongs: constitutional history. For more than two centuries, Americans have argued about what the US Constitution permits or requires (or not), and what values and ideals it enshrines (or not)—indeed, who is to be included (or not) in the very definition of "We the People."

This book provides abundant resources to explore key moments of debate about the Constitution and its meaning, focusing on fundamental questions of citizenship and rights. It analyzes American history through the use and misuse of the Constitution over time, from early disputes about liberty and slavery to more recent quarrels over equality and dignity. With a foreword by Ruth Bader Ginsburg, this book's succinct and probing essays by prize-winning historians—including Linda Greenhouse, Mary Sarah Bilder, Annette Gordon-Reed, Eric Foner, Sam Erman, Julie Suk, Laura Kalman, and Melissa Murray—provide the core of the book. Their topics encompass woman suffrage, school desegregation, Japanese internment, McCarthyism, all dramatic turning points in American history. Carefully selected and annotated primary sources and focused discussion questions provide teachers with the tools to bring constitutional history into the classroom with ease.

As this book amply demonstrates, United States history is constitutional history. A companion website provides additional resources for teachers.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780197516300
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 06/10/2022
Pages: 464
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.80(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Steven A. Steinbach teaches United States History and American Government courses and has served as history department chair at Sidwell Friends School in Washington, DC. Previously he was a partner in the Washington, DC, law firm of Williams & Connolly LLP, where he specialized in criminal and civil litigation.

Maeva Marcus, a past president of the American Society for Legal History, is Research Professor of Law and Director of the Institute for Constitutional Studies at the George Washington University Law School. She serves as the general editor of the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise History of the Supreme Court of the United States. Author of Truman and the Steel Seizure Case: The Limits of Presidential Power, she also edited the eight-volume series The Documentary History of the Supreme Court of the United States, 1789-1800.

Robert Cohen, professor in the Department of Teaching & Learning at New York University, has written or edited more than a dozen books about United States history, including Rethinking America's Past: Howard Zinn's The People's History of the United States in the Classroom and Beyond. He is co-founder of the NYU-Steinhardt-NYU School of Law Constitution in the Schools Partnership program.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Introduction
About the Companion Website
Contributors

Chapter 1: The Foundations of Constitutional History
Essay: Shaping the Constitution
Linda Greenhouse
Sources:
Five Questions about the Constitution
Judicial Review
Interpreting the Constitution

Chapter 2: The Founding (1776 - 1791)
Essay: The Age of the Constitution
Mary Sarah Bilder
Sources:
Constitutional Provisions Regarding Slavery
A Bill of Rights?

Chapter 3: The New Constitution in the New Nation (1789 - 1848)
Essay: Creating "We the People"
Annette Gordon-Reed
Sources:
Slavery, Race, and the States
Native American Policy

Chapter 4: The Constitution in Crisis (1848 - 1877)
Essay: The Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Constitutional Revolution
Eric Foner
Sources:
Fugitive Slave Act
Dred Scott
Interpretation of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments

Chapter 5: The Constitution at Home and Abroad (1877 - 1917)
Essay: From the Reconstruction Constitution to Empire
Sam Erman
Sources:
The Chinese Exclusion Act (and the Anarchist Exclusion Act)
Territories

Chapter 6: The Constitution during War and Peace (1917 - 1945)
Essay: Democracy at Home: Prohibition, War, and Women's Suffrage
Julie Suk
Sources:
The Nineteenth Amendment and the Equal Rights Amendment
Confinement of Japanese Americans during World War II

Chapter 7: The Constitution in the Postwar World (1945 - 1974)
Essay: The Warren Court and Constitutional Liberalism
Laura Kalman
Sources:
McCarthyism
Civil Rights - School Desegregation
Civil Rights - Public Accommodations

Chapter 8: Constitutionalism in Contemporary America
Essay: The Rights Revolution and the Modern Supreme Court
Melissa Murray
Sources:
Privacy and Abortion
Women's Rights
Same-Sex Relationships

Appendix 1: Debating the Constitution
Appendix 2: Other Ideas for Teaching Constitutional History

Further Reading
Websites
Acknowledgments
Index
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