Brandeis and the Progressive Constitution: Erie, the Judicial Power, and the Politics of the Federal Courts in Twentieth-century America

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Yale University Press, Feb 9, 2000 - Law - 417 pages

During the twentieth century, and particularly between the 1930s and 1950s, ideas about the nature of constitutional government, the legitimacy of judicial lawmaking, and the proper role of the federal courts evolved and shifted. This book focuses on Supreme Court justice Louis D. Brandeis and his opinion in the 1938 landmark case Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, which resulted in a significant relocation of power from federal to state courts. Distinguished legal historian Edward A. Purcell, Jr., shows how the Erie case provides a window on the legal, political, and ideological battles over the federal courts in the New Deal era. Purcell also offers an in-depth study of Brandeis's constitutional jurisprudence and evolving legal views.


Examining the social origins and intended significance of the Erie decision, Purcell concludes that the case was a product of early twentieth-century progressivism. The author explores Brandeis's personal values and political purposes and argues that the justice was an exemplar of neither "judicial restraint" nor "neutral principles," despite his later reputation. In an analysis of the continual reconceptions of both Brandeis and Erie by new generations of judges and scholars in the twentieth century, Purcell also illuminates how individual perspectives and social pressures combined to drive the law's evolution.

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Contents

Introduction
1
The Premise of an Age Law Politics and the Federal Courts 18771937
11
Expanding the Federal Judicial Power Justice David J Brewer and the General Common Law
39
Progressive Judicial Reform After World War I Diversity Jurisdiction and the Labor Injunction
64
Litigant Strategies and Judicial Dynamics
95
Brandeis The Judge as Human
115
Defects Social The Progressive as Legal Craftsman
141
Defects Political The Progressive as Constitutional Architect
165
Erosion and Creation of Meaning in an Age of Transition
195
Henry M Hart Jr and the Power of Transforming Vision
229
Cold War Politics and Neutral Principles The Federal Judicial Power in a New Age
258
To Centurys End Meaning Politics and the Constitutional Enterprise
285
Notes
309
Index
409
Copyright

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