
The Lochner Court, Myth and Reality
Substantive Due Process from the 1890s to the 1930s
Michael J. Phillips(Author)
Praeger Publishers Inc
Published on 30. November 2000
Book
Hardback
224 pages
978-0-275-96930-1 (ISBN)
Description
Conventional wisdom holds that the Lochner Court illegitimately used the Constitution's due process clauses to strike down Progressive legislation designed to protect the poor and powerless against big business. This book systematically examines all of the U.S. Supreme Court's substantive due process cases from 1897 through 1937 and finds that they do not support long-held beliefs about the Lochner Court. The Court was more Progressive than commonly imagined, striking down far fewer laws on substantive due process grounds than is generally believed. The laws it overturned were not invariably social legislation, and relatively few due process cases involved freedom of contract. Moreover, Holmes, despite his reputation as a Great Dissenter, joined many of the cases striking down government action.
The book attacks three familiar normative criticisms of the Lochner Court. It accerts that (1) the Court's substantive due process decisions almost certainly were not motivated by a conscious desire to assist business by suppressing social legislation; only sometimes did the justices' nostalgia for laissez-faire lead to this result; (2) the conservative justices' understanding of business and government often exceeded that found in the typical Brandeis Brief; and (3) most applications of Lochner-era substantive due process cannot readily be described as illegitimate assertions of judicial power lacking justification in the due process clauses.
The book attacks three familiar normative criticisms of the Lochner Court. It accerts that (1) the Court's substantive due process decisions almost certainly were not motivated by a conscious desire to assist business by suppressing social legislation; only sometimes did the justices' nostalgia for laissez-faire lead to this result; (2) the conservative justices' understanding of business and government often exceeded that found in the typical Brandeis Brief; and (3) most applications of Lochner-era substantive due process cannot readily be described as illegitimate assertions of judicial power lacking justification in the due process clauses.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Interest Age: From 7 to 17 years
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 17 mm
Weight
505 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-275-96930-1 (9780275969301)
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Additional editions

Michael J. Phillips
The Lochner Court, Myth and Reality
Substantive Due Process from the 1890s to the 1930s
E-Book
11/2000
1st Edition
Praeger Publishers Inc
€82.99
Available for download
Person
Michael J. Phillips is professor emeritus of business administration at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. During his 23 years at Indiana University he wrote more than 40 law journal articles, served as editor-in-chief of the American Business Law Journal, and coauthored two business law texts. He is also the author of Ethics and Manipulation in Advertising: Answering the Flawed Indictment (Quorum, 1997) and The Dilemmas of Individualism: Status, Liberty, and American Constitutional Law (Greenwood, 1983).
Content
Preface
The Conventional Wisdom
An Overview of Lochner-Era Susbstantive Due Process
What Motivated the Old Court?
The Question of Unequal Bargaining Power
The Originalist Challenge
Summing Up and Looking Ahead
Bibliography
Index
The Conventional Wisdom
An Overview of Lochner-Era Susbstantive Due Process
What Motivated the Old Court?
The Question of Unequal Bargaining Power
The Originalist Challenge
Summing Up and Looking Ahead
Bibliography
Index