
The Ninth Amendment has had a remarkably robust history, playing a role in almost every significant constitutional debate in American history, including the controversy over the Alien and Sedition Acts, the struggle over slavery, and the constitutionality of the New Deal. Until very recently, however, this history has been almost completely lost due to a combination of historical accident, mistaken assumptions, and misplaced historical documents. Drawing upon a wide range of primary sources, most never before included in any book on the Ninth Amendment or the Bill of Rights, Kurt T. Lash recovers the lost history of the Ninth Amendment and explores how its original understanding can be applied to protect the people's retained rights today. The most important aspect of The Lost History of the Ninth Amendment is its presentation of newly uncovered historical evidence which calls into question the currently presumed meaning and application of the Ninth Amendment. The evidence not only challenges the traditional view regarding the original meaning of the Ninth Amendment, it also falsifies the common assumption that the Amendment lay dormant prior to the Supreme Court's "discovery" of the clause in Griswold v. Connecticut. As a history of the Ninth Amendment, the book recapitulates the history of federalism in America and the idea that local self-government is a right retained by the people. This issue has particular contemporary salience as the Supreme Court considers whether states have the right to authorize medicinal use of marijuana, refuse to assist the enforcement of national laws like the Patriot Act, or regulate physician-assisted suicide. The meaning of the Ninth Amendment has played a key role in past Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court justices and the current divide on the Court regarding the meaning of the Ninth Amendment makes it likely the subject will come up again during the next set of hearings.
This book investigates the original intent and historical application of the Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution, challenging the prevailing academic and judicial consensus. Kurt T. Lash, a professor of law, utilizes a vast array of previously overlooked primary source documents to reconstruct the amendment's role in American federalism. He argues that the amendment was not a dormant clause until the mid-twentieth century, but rather a central component in significant constitutional debates throughout the nation's history.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and historians frequently cite this work as a critical intervention in constitutional theory that forces a re-evaluation of the Ninth Amendment's historical trajectory. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which requires a foundational understanding of American constitutional law to fully appreciate the author's evidentiary claims.
Page Count:
394
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190451742
ISBN-13:
9780190451745
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!