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No State Shall Abridge: The Fourteenth Amendment and the Bill of Rights
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References
1987
Year
Constitutional LawLawAdministrative LawSecond Amendment TheorySocial SciencesCivil Rights ActionsCivil LibertyRights GuaranteesLegal TheoryCivil RightsSecond Amendment HistoryPublic PolicyStates' RightsConstitutional AmendmentUnited States ConstitutionLibrary JournalState Shall AbridgeFreedom Of SpeechHumanitiesConstitutional LitigationLegal HistoryFourteenth AmendmentAmerican HistorycurtisFederal Constitutional LawPolitical ScienceConstitutionSocial Justice
The book is carefully organized and well written, and it deals with a question that is still of great importance--what is the relationship of the Bill of Rights to the states.--Journal of American HistoryCurtis effectively settles a serious legal debate: whether the framers of the 14th Amendment intended to incorporate the Bill of Rights guarantees and thereby inhibit state action. Taking on a formidable array of constitutional scholars, . . . he rebuts their argument with vigor and effectiveness, conclusively demonstrating the legitimacy of the incorporation thesis. . . . A bold, forcefully argued, important study.--Library Journal