The Bill of Rights by Linda R. Monk

The Bill of Rights

By

  • Genre Political Science
  • Publisher Hachette+ORM
  • Released
  • Length 493 Pages

Description

An engaging, accessible guide to the Bill of Rights for everyday citizens.

With a Foreword by US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg

In The Bill of Rights: A User's Guide, award-winning author and constitutional scholar Linda R. Monk explores the remarkable history of the Bill of Rights amendment by amendment, the Supreme Court's interpretation of each right, and the power of citizens to enforce those rights.

This guide features stories of the ordinary people who made the Bill of Rights come alive, including Fannie Lou Hamer, a Mississippi sharecropper who became a national civil rights leader; Clarence Earl Gideon, a prisoner whose handwritten petition to the Supreme Court expanded the right to counsel; Mary Beth Tinker, a 13-year-old whose protest of the Vietnam War established free speech rights for students; Michael Hardwick, a bartender who fought for privacy after police entered his bedroom unlawfully; Suzette Kelo, a nurse who opposed the city's takeover of her working-class neighborhood; and Simon Tam, a millennial whose ten-year trademark battle for his band "The Slants" ended in a unanimous Supreme Court victory. Such people prove that, in the words of Judge Learned Hand, "Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women; when it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court, can save it."

Exploring the history, scope, and meaning of the first ten amendments—as well as the Fourteenth Amendment, which nationalized them and extended new rights of equality to all—The Bill of Rights: A User's Guide is a powerful examination of the values that define American life and the tools that every citizen needs.

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