01529 2200229 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001200123084001800135100002200153245010900175260004700284300002700331520082700358650004301185700001901228990002601247990002601273INLIS00000000000308520221102032535 a0010-0520003085221102 | | eng  a0-19-512636-X aeng a342.730 a342.730 URO m0 aUrofsky, Melvin I12aMarch of Liberty :bA Constitutional History of the United States /cMelvin I Urofsky and Paul Finkelman aNew York :bOxford University Press,c2002 axiv, 1027 p. ;c24 cm. aThis book attempted to blend the so-called new legal history with the usual emphasis on great cases. Large sections were devoted to topics that did not appear in the traditional constitutional history texts: common law developments, the relationship of commercial growth to legal change, the rise of the legal profession, changes in legal education, and the handling of certain key issues at the state level. These section grew out of a belief that the Supreme Court does not act in a vacuum, and that the great powers of the federal government to regulate interstate commerce, for example, is closely related to commercial law and economic developments in the states. In some instances, the high court reflects trends already apparent at the state level; in other cases, its decisions determine what happens in state law. 4aConstitutional history - United States0 aPaul Finkelman a11573/MKRI-P/XII-2008 a11573/MKRI-P/XII-2008