U.S. Constitution For Dummies

Höfundur Michael Arnheim

Útgefandi Wiley Professional Development (P&T)

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781119387299

Útgáfa 2

Útgáfuár 2018

1.790 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Cover
  • Introduction
  • About This Book
  • Conventions Used in This Book
  • Icons Used in This Book
  • Beyond the Book
  • Where to Go from Here
  • Part 1: Getting Started with the U.S. Constitution
  • Chapter 1: Identifying the Main Principles and Controversies of the Constitution
  • Defining “Constitution”
  • Knowing When and Why the Constitution Was Created
  • Summarizing the Main Principles of the Constitution
  • Identifying Some Areas of Controversy
  • Chapter 2: Probing Underlying Concepts: Big Thinkers, Big Thoughts
  • Building on Magna Carta
  • Respecting the Rule of Law (or the Rule of Lawyers?)
  • Analyzing the Concepts Underlying the Declaration of Independence
  • Establishing a Republic
  • Chapter 3: Untangling Some Confusion and Ambiguities
  • Listing Some Sources of Confusion
  • Discarding Out-of-Date Ideas?
  • Clarifying Uncertainties
  • Giving Some Important Principles the Silent Treatment
  • Interpreting the Constitution
  • Chapter 4: Catching a Bird’s-Eye View of the Constitution
  • Presenting the Preamble: “We the People …”
  • Article I: Setting Up the Congress
  • Article II: Hailing the Chief
  • Article III: Understating Judicial Power
  • Article IV: Getting Along with the Neighbors — and Uncle Sam
  • Article V: Changing versus Amending the Constitution
  • Article VI: Fudging Federalism
  • Article VII: Ratifying the Constitution
  • Chapter 5: Changing the Constitution by Amendment and Interpretation
  • Noting the Four Paths to an Amendment
  • Explaining What Happens in Practice
  • Listing the Amendments
  • Debating the Need for Judge-Made Law
  • Part 2: We the People: How the United States Is Governed
  • Chapter 6: Scrutinizing Sovereignty: Who Rules America?
  • Introducing “We the People”
  • Hailing the Chief
  • Congress: Flexing Its Lawmaking Muscle
  • Giving the States Their Due
  • The High Court: Saying What the Law Is
  • Uncovering Conspiracies
  • Chapter 7: Defining Federalism
  • Tracing the Origins of U.S. Federalism
  • Testing State Sovereignty: Some Recent Supreme Court Decisions
  • Foreign Affairs: Looking at the Influence of Treaties
  • Chapter 8: Separation of Powers: Checking and Balancing
  • No Moonlighting for the President
  • Keeping the Branches Apart
  • Checking and Balancing
  • Chapter 9: Doing Business: The Commerce Clause
  • How the Commerce Clause Was Born
  • Interpreting the Commerce Clause
  • Hunting Down the Dormant Commerce Clause
  • Tracing the Changing Meaning of the Commerce Clause
  • Part 3: Assessing the Three Engines of Government: The President, Congress, and the Judiciary
  • Chapter 10: Examining the Role of the President
  • Being “eligible to the Office of President”
  • Picking a President
  • Canning the President
  • Signing, Vetoing, and Pocketing Legislation
  • Appointing Key Positions
  • Hailing the Chief: The President’s Administration
  • Battling Executive Privilege
  • Making War versus Declaring War
  • Chapter 11: Giving Everyone a Voice: The House of Representatives and the Senate
  • Making the Laws That Govern the Land
  • Visiting the People’s House
  • Getting to Know the Senate
  • Passing Legislation
  • Chapter 12: “Saying What the Law Is”: The Judicial System
  • Examining the Courts’ Function
  • Appointments and Elections: Becoming a Judge
  • Understanding Judicial Independence without Accountability
  • Making the Judiciary Paramount: Judicial Review
  • Casting the Swing Vote
  • Labeling Supreme Court Justices
  • Chapter 13: You’re Fired! Investigating the Impeachment Process
  • There’s Nothing Peachy about Impeachment
  • “High Crimes and Misdemeanors”: What Impeachment Is and Isn’t
  • Explaining the Impeachment Process
  • Understanding the Implications of Impeachment
  • Tracking Impeachment in Action
  • Removing State Officials from Office
  • Part 4: Guaranteeing Important Rights: The Bill of Rights
  • Chapter 14: The First Amendment: Freedom of Religion, Speech, and Assembly
  • Considering the Amendment’s Wording
  • Separating Church and State
  • Assuring the Free Exercise of Religion
  • Guaranteeing Freedom of Expression
  • Leaking Classified Information
  • Having Your Cake …
  • Protecting the Right to Assemble and Petition
  • Chapter 15: The Second Amendment: Bearing Arms
  • Debating Interpretation: Individual versus State Rights
  • Breaking Down the Amendment’s Clauses
  • Upholding Individual Rights: D.C. v. Heller
  • Considering the Continuation of the Debate
  • Chapter 16: The Third and Fourth Amendments: Protecting Citizens from Government Forces
  • Keeping the Feds Out of Your House
  • Keeping the Government Off Your Back
  • Chapter 17: Taking the Fifth — and a Bit of the Fourteenth
  • Invoking the “Great Right” against Self-Incrimination
  • Peeking Behind the Closed Doors of the Grand Jury
  • Avoiding Double Jeopardy
  • Agonizing over Due Process
  • Opening Up the Incorporation Debate
  • Taking Private Property
  • Chapter 18: Regulating Crime and Punishment: The Sixth through Eighth Amendments
  • Outlining Defendants’ Rights in Criminal Prosecutions: The Sixth Amendment
  • Guaranteeing Jury Trials in Civil Suits: The Seventh Amendment
  • Prohibiting “Cruel and Unusual Punishments”: The Eighth Amendment
  • Chapter 19: Analyzing an “Inkblot” and a “Truism”: The Ninth and Tenth Amendments
  • Reading the Constitution: The Ninth Amendment
  • Considering the Tenth Amendment
  • Part 5: Addressing Liberties and Modifying the Government: More Amendments
  • Chapter 20: States’ Rights, Elections, and Slavery: The Eleventh through Thirteenth Amendments
  • The Eleventh Amendment: Asserting State Sovereign Immunity?
  • Cleaning Up the Framers’ Political Mess: The Twelfth Amendment
  • Removing the Blot of Slavery: The Thirteenth Amendment
  • Chapter 21: The Fourteenth Amendment: Ensuring Equal Protection
  • Defining Citizenship
  • Understanding States’ Obligations
  • Achieving “Equal Justice Under Law” — Or Not
  • Disqualifying Confederates from Office
  • Repudiating Confederate Debts
  • Empowering Congress
  • Chapter 22: Starts, Stops, and Clarifications: Amendments since 1870
  • Removing Race Qualifications for Voting: The Fifteenth Amendment
  • Letting Uncle Sam Raid Your Piggy Bank: The Sixteenth Amendment
  • Electing the Senate: The Seventeenth Amendment
  • Outlawing Liquor: The Eighteenth Amendment
  • Giving Women the Vote: The Nineteenth Amendment
  • Moving Out of the Horse and Buggy Age: The Twentieth Amendment
  • Repealing Prohibition: The Twenty-First Amendment
  • Taking George Washington’s Lead: The Twenty-Second Amendment
  • Enfranchising the Nation’s Capital: The Twenty-Third Amendment
  • Banning Tax Barriers to Voting: The Twenty-Fourth Amendment
  • Succeeding to the Presidency: The Twenty-Fifth Amendment
  • Lowering the Voting Age: The Twenty-Sixth Amendment
  • Limiting Congressional Pay Raises: The Twenty-Seventh Amendment
  • Part 6: The Part of Tens
  • Chapter 23: Ten Landmark Constitutional Cases
  • Marbury v. Madison (1803)
  • Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
  • Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger (2003)
  • Kelo v. City of New London (2005)
  • Clinton v. Jones (1997)
  • Roe v. Wade (1973)
  • Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (FEC) (2010)
  • Obergefell v. Hodges (2015)
  • Glossip v. Gross (2015)
  • Riley v. California (2014)
  • Chapter 24: Ten Influential Supreme Court Justices
  • John Marshall
  • Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.
  • Hugo Black
  • Earl Warren
  • Thurgood Marshall
  • John Paul Stevens
  • Sandra Day O’Connor
  • Antonin Scalia
  • Anthony Kennedy
  • John Roberts
  • Chapter 25: Two Sides of Five Constitutional Conundrums
  • Is the Constitution Outdated?
  • Should the Electoral College Be Abolished?
  • Does the U.S. Supreme Court Have Too Much Power?
  • Is the United States a Democracy?
  • Does the President Have Too Much Power?
  • Appendix: Constitution of the United States of America
  • Preamble
  • Articles
  • Signatures
  • Amendments
  • About the Author
  • Advertisement Page
  • Connect with Dummies
  • Index
  • End User License Agreement
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