Constitutionalism and Rights

Front Cover
Gary C. Bryner, Noel B. Reynolds
SUNY Press, Jan 1, 1987 - Political Science - 163 pages
Constitutionalism and Rights explores the ambivalent relationship between the American tradition of constitutionalism and the notions of rights that have emerged over the last three centuries. The six essays focus systematically on selected tensions between these two fundamental strands in the American tradition of liberty and self-government. Discussed are: ideas of rights and constitutionalism generally; mechanisms and procedures necessary to assure rights in a large bureaucratic state; rights as expressed in public welfare programs; innovations employed by the eighteenth-century Framers to achieve limited government as a means to securing fair and equal individual freedom; the dependence of rights on institutional devices and the rule of law; the need for public virtue (balancing individual rights with self-sacrifice for the common good) if the American constitutional system is to survive; and the dangers of individualism and individual rights posed by modern liberalism.

The essayists are prominent scholars representing the disciplines of political science, government, and law. They all state their confidence in the American constitutional system, but they also voice doubts about the future if problems are not redressed. The editors conclude their introduction by expressing hope that this volume "will clarify some important issues and help us remember essential lessons of the past, as we continue in this great public conversation."

Constitutionalism and Rights is the first of a three-volume series examining significant features of the Constitution. The series, inspired by the bicentennial of that great achievement, consists of essays presented by scholars at three conferences on the Constitution held at Brigham Young University in 1985, 1986, and 1987, and several additional essays written especially for these volumes.

From inside the book

Selected pages

Contents

Introduction
THE POLITICAL IDEOLOGY OF THE FOUNDERS
5
CONSTITUTIONAL POLITICS STATES SECTIONS AND THE NATIONAL INTEREST
27
1787 AND 1776 PATRICK HENRY JAMES MADISON THE CONSTITUTION AND THE REVOLUTION
57
RELIGION PUBLIC VIRTUE AND THE FOUNDING OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC
89
RECOVERING FIRST PRINCIPLES CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE CONSTITUTION AND THE FATE OF CLASSICAL REPUBLICANISM
117
THE ORIGINAL UNDERSTANDING AND THE UNWRITTEN CONSTITUTION
143
Further Reading
173
Index
179
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1987)

Gary C. Bryner is an assistant professor of political science at Brigham Young University.

Noel B. Reynolds is a professor of political science at Brigham Young University.

Bibliographic information