Glass and Gavel

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A01=Nancy Maveety
alcohol culture
Alexander Hamilton
Author_Nancy Maveety
Benjamin Rush
Category=JPQ
Category=WBXD
Charles Hughes
chief justice
Dred Scott
Earl Warren
Edward White
eq_bestseller
eq_food-drink
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Fred Vinson
George Washington
Harlan Stone
individual rights
John Jay
John Marshall
John Pickering
John Roberts
John Rutledge
Melville Fuller
mint julep
Oliver Ellsworth
prohibition
Roberts Court
Roger Brooke Taney
rum
Salmon P. Chase
temperance
The Burger Court
The Chase Court
The Constitution of the United States
The Eighteenth Amendment
The Federalist Papers
The Fuller Court
The Hughes Court
The Marshall Court
The Rehnquist Court
The Stone Court
The Sugar Act
The Supreme Court
The Taft Court
The Taney Court
The Triangular Trade
The Twenty-First Amendment
The Vinson Court
The Waite Court
The Warren Court
The White Court
Thomas Jefferson
Waite Morrison
Warren Burger
whiskey
William Rehnquist
William Taft

Product details

  • ISBN 9781538111987
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2018
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In Glass and Gavel, noted legal expert Nancy Maveety has written the first book devoted to alcohol in the nation’s highest court of law, the United States Supreme Court.

Combining an examination of the justices’ participation in the social use of alcohol across the Court’s history with a survey of the Court’s decisions on alcohol regulation, Maveety illustrates the ways in which the Court has helped to construct the changing culture of alcohol. “Intoxicating liquor” is one of the few things so plainly material to explicitly merit mention, not once, but twice, in the amendments to the U.S. Constitution. Maveety shows how much of our constitutional law—Supreme Court rulings on the powers of government and the rights of individuals—has been shaped by our American love/hate relationship with the bottle and the barroom.

From the tavern as a judicial meeting space, to the bootlegger as both pariah and patriot, to the individual freedom issue of the sobriety checkpoint—there is the Supreme Court, adjudicating but also partaking in the temper(ance) of the times. In an entertaining and accessible style, Maveety shows that what the justices say and do with respect to alcohol provides important lessons about their times, our times, and our “constitutional cocktail” of limited governmental power and individual rights.

Nancy Maveety is professor of political science at Tulane University, specializing in U.S. Supreme Court studies, judicial decision making, and comparative judicial politics.

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