James B. Staab is professor of political science at the University of Central Missouri.
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Description
Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Biographical Sketches 2. Hugo Black's Originalism: Jeffersonian 3. Antonin Scalia's Originalism: Hamiltonian 4. ClarenceThomas's Originalism: Natural Law Libertarian 5. Black v. Scalia and Thomas 6. Scalia v. Thomas Conclusion Notes Selected Bibliography Case Index Subject Index
"Staab's analysis of Black, Scalia, and Thomas helpfully draws important distinctions in the reasoning of justices who often reach the same conclusions via differing intellectual paths."--Perspectives on Politics "Through painstaking analysis of three influential Supreme Court justices' opinions, Limits of Constraint succeeds in bringing Hugo Black's jurisprudence into contemporary debates about originalism and also highlighting and analyzing a wide range of cases where Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas reached different conclusions."--John Dinan, author of Keeping the People's Liberties: Legislators, Citizens, and Judges as Guardians of Rights "This book is a timely and engaging analysis of the jurisprudence of three Supreme Court justices, all of whom have ostensibly adhered to the same standards in search of objectivity in constitutional interpretation. With rich and balanced detail and documentation, James Staab's examination of textualism and originalism, as practiced by Justices Black, Scalia, and Thomas, convincingly concludes that these tools offer little objectivity in channeling judicial choice."--James Magee, Judge Hugh M. Morris Professor Emeritus, University of Delaware

