
In 1973, a group of California lawyers formed a non-profit, public-interest legal foundation dedicated to defending conservative principles in court. Calling themselves the Pacific Legal Foundation, they declared war on the U.S. regulatory state--the sets of rules, legal precedents, and bureaucratic processes that govern the way Americans do business. Believing that the growing size and complexity of government regulations threatened U.S. economy and infringed on property rights, Pacific Legal Foundation began to file a series of lawsuits challenging the government's power to plan the use of private land or protect environmental qualities. By the end of the decade, they had been joined in this effort by spin-off legal foundations across the country.The Other Rights Revolution explains how a little-known collection of lawyers and politicians--with some help from angry property owners and bulldozer-driving Sagebrush Rebels--tried to bring liberal government to heel in the final decades of the twentieth century. Decker demonstrates how legal and constitutional battles over property rights, preservation, and the environment helped to shape the political ideas and policy agendas of modern conservatism. By uncovering the history--including the regionally distinctive experiences of the American West--behind the conservative mobilization in the courts, Decker offers a new interpretation of the Reagan-era right.
This book investigates how a network of conservative public-interest legal foundations systematically challenged the American regulatory state to reshape property rights and environmental policy. Author Jefferson Decker, a historian of American politics, utilizes archival research and legal case files to argue that these litigation strategies were central to the evolution of modern conservatism, moving beyond traditional electoral politics to influence governance through the judiciary.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and political historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to understanding the institutional development of the American Right. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's success in connecting niche legal history to broader national political shifts.
Page Count:
296
Publication Date:
2016-09-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190467312
ISBN-13:
9780190467319
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