01382 2200229 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001500097041000800112082000800120084001200128100002300140245005200163260003400215300002800249500002300277520077700300650002301077990002601100990002601126INLIS00000000000096020221101015831 a0010-0520000960221101 | | eng  a1855211858 aeng a342 a342 CON0 aConstitutional Law1 aConstitutional Law /cEdited by Mark V. Tushnet aAldershot :bDartmouth,c1992 axviii, 523 p. ;c25 cm. aIndeks : p.521-523 aThis book is designed to provide important research materials in an accessible form. It is designed to introduce the reader to the range of issues concerning constitutional theory that occupy the attention of constitutional scholars in the United States today. The Constitution has been the fundamental document of the government of the nation for longer than any comparable document elsewhere. The academic discipline of constitutional law has had a shorter lifespan, dating essentially from the late 19th century, scholars have been concerned with constitutional law for longer in the United States than in any other nation. Largely as a result of this longevity, US legal scholarship in constitutional law is somewhat more sophisticated than its counterparts elsewhere. 4aConstitutional law a11561/MKRI-P/XII-2008 a11561/MKRI-P/XII-2008