01703 2200193 4500001002100000005001500021008004100036020001800077035001900095041000800114082001100122084001700133100002100150245009600171260004800267300003200315520112200347650004001469INLIS00000000000307120200508202136200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||eng|| a9780691152424 0010-0520003071 aeng0 a342.73 a342.73/SUN/C0 aCass R. Sunstein00aConstitution of many minds : why the founding document doesn’t mean what it meant before. aPrincetonbPrinceton University Pressc2009 axi, 225 p. ; 24 cm.c24 cm. aThe future of the U.S. Supreme Court hangs in the balance like never before. Will conservatives or liberals succeed in remaking the court in their own image? In A Constitution of Many Minds, acclaimed law scholar Cass Sunstein proposes a bold new way of interpreting the Constitution, one that respects the Constitution's text and history but also refuses to view the document as frozen in time. Exploring hot-button issues ranging from presidential power to same-sex relations to gun rights, Sunstein shows how the meaning of the Constitution is reestablished in every generation as new social commitments and ideas compel us to reassess our fundamental beliefs. He focuses on three approaches to the Constitution--traditionalism, which grounds the document's meaning in long-standing social practices, not necessarily in the views of the founding generation; populism, which insists that judges should respect contemporary public opinion; and cosmopolitanism, which looks at how foreign courts address constitutional questions, and which suggests that the meaning of the Constitution turns on what other nations do. 0aConstitutional law --United States.