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Keeping Faith with the Constitution

ACS to Host Debate over Constitutional Interpretation and Keeping Faith with the Constitution

 

As part of its celebration of Constitution Week, ACS will host a debate over constitutional interpretation, and in particular, a newly published book, Keeping Faith with the Constitution, which advances a method of interpretation faithful to the text of the Constitution, while protecting the document's principles for each new generation of Americans.

Stanford Law School Professor Pamela S. Karlan, co-author of Keeping Faith, will argue that "constitutional fidelity" is the proper approach to interpretation because it is faithful to the words of the document and ensures that the Constitution retains its relevance for each new generation of Americans. Georgetown Law Center Professor Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz will assert that "originalism," and "strict construction," methods favored by Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, are the best way of understanding and preserving constitutional principles.

The debate is particularly timely because of greater scrutiny of constitutional interpretation in the context of judicial nominations. Following the debate, Karlan will sign copies of Keeping Faith, which was recently published by Oxford University Press.

 

Featuring:

  • Moderator, Dahlia Lithwick, senior editor, Slate.

  • Pamela S. Karlan, Kenneth and Harle Montgomery Professor of Public Interest Law and Co-Director, Supreme Court Litigation Clinic, Stanford Law School; member of the ACS Board of Directors.

  • Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz, Associate Professor of Law, Georgetown Law Center; member of the national Board of Visitors of the Federalist Society; and former Attorney-Advisor at the Office of Legal Counsel during the George W. Bush administration.

September, 15, 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Light refreshments served at 6 p.m., followed by the debate at 6:30 p.m.

This event will be held at The Open Society Institute, 1730 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, 7th Floor, Washington, D.C. 20006.

RSVP: The event is free, but RSVP is required. Please RSVP to press@acslaw.org.

 


 

In 2009, the American Constitution Society for Law and Policy (ACS) published two books on the Constitution to inform and shape the ongoing debate over how to interpret our nation's founding document. The lead book, Keeping Faith with the Constitution, articulates a vision of the Constitution and an approach to its interpretation that have enabled it to retain its relevance for every generation of Americans while remaining faithful to the original document. The second book compiles exemplary resources on Constitutional interpretation that spring from the text, structure, history, and the values it expounds.   

 

Keeping Faith examines the text and history of the Constitution to show how the Framers inscribed the fundamental values of liberty, equality and democracy into the document. The authors describe what they call "constitutional fidelity," a principle that "serves not only to preserve the Constitution's meaning over time, but also to maintain its authority and legitimacy. The words and principles of the Constitution endure as our fundamental law because they have been made relevant to the conditions and challenges of each generation through an ongoing process of interpretation."

By considering constitutional interpretation through history, the authors show that their approach has enabled our nation's greatest advances, from Brown v. Board of Education to women's rights, free speech, the Miranda decision, and the New Deal, emphasizing that our Constitution "reflects, in a spare outline, the moral trajectory of a nation continually striving for greater justice." 

In 2010, Oxford University Press is set to release an updated version of Keeping Faith as part of its acclaimed Inalienable Rights series.



Keeping Faith with the Constitution

 

Download Keeping Faith with the Constitution

Download entire book
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Constitution's Vision and Values
Chapter 2 Judicial Interpretation of the Constitution
Chapter 3 Equality
Chapter 4 Promoting the General Welfare
Chapter 5 Separation of Powers
Chapter 6 Democracy
Chapter 7 Criminal Justice
Chapter 8 Liberty
Chapter 9 Progress and Possibilities

 

 

 

 


Download It is a Constitution We Are Expounding: Collected Writings on Interpreting Our Founding Document

It is a Constitution We Are Expounding


Click on the headings below to jump to the section:


KEEPING FAITH FACT SHEET AND FAQ


Keeping Faith with the Constitution is a new publication of the American Constitution Society that presents a compelling and common-sense approach to constitutional interpretation – one that is faithful to the Constitution’s words and principles and that explains why it is the world’s most enduring written constitution. The book, authored by scholars Goodwin Liu, Pamela S. Karlan, and Christopher H. Schroeder, examines the text and history of the Constitution to show how the Framers inscribed the fundamental values of liberty, equality, and democracy into the document. It then describes and defends an approach to interpreting the Constitution the authors call “constitutional fidelity,” which, as the Framers envisioned, applies the Constitution’s broad principles to the changing needs, conditions, and understandings of our society. This dynamic process of constitutional interpretation, the book shows, has brought about the greatest legal achievements in our history, has allowed us to meet new challenges and unforeseen circumstances, and has enabled each generation of Americans to keep faith with the Constitution.

Download the fact sheet here.

Download the FAQ here.


SUMMARY OF THE BOOKS



Along with Keeping Faith With the Constitution, ACS also has published a companion volume, entitled It Is a Constitution We Are Expounding: Collected Writings on Interpreting Our Founding Document. This book, with a Foreword by Professor Laurence H. Tribe, contains excerpts from some of the finest existing writing on methods of constitutional interpretation, taken from decisions of the Supreme Court and other opinions and speeches by Justices and judges, the scholarly literature, and other sources. The materials gathered in this volume explore a variety of interpretive resources that can help illuminate the Constitution’s meaning, including its text, structure, and history, the shared values it embodies, judicial precedent, and the consequences a particular interpretation is likely to have. Like Keeping Faith – whose authors drew upon many of the ideas presented in this volume – this publication presents accepted tools of interpretation; that are faithful to the Constitution.

Both books are designed to be useful to a wide readership, including law students, lawyers, judges, and every citizen engaged in the nation’s debates over the Constitution, the courts, and judicial nominations.

Read more here.


WHAT THEY'RE SAYING ABOUT ACS


 

As we contemplate the appointment of a new Supreme Court justice, two new books, released on May 1 by the American Constitution Society, will be particularly enlightening. … It is a happy coincidence that these two works come to us at precisely this moment in our history. Anyone interested in understanding the judicial philosophy that President Obama is likely to seek in his Supreme Court nominees can do no better than to read these works. - Professor Geoffrey Stone, Huffington Post

This book promises to make a serious, even defining, contribution to the literature and debates over constitutional interpretation at a potentially watershed moment, at least with regard to constitutional interpretation in the political branches. And the web-based release and easy, accessible style will make possible a wide distribution and readership. I highly recommend this excellent work.
- Professor Steven Schwinn, Constitutional Law Prof Blog

Judges, lawyers and scholars have debated endlessly the meanings and purposes of the provisions of our 1787 Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the Civil War Amendments, as well as their proper relationships to each other. It is most timely and fitting for the American Constitution Society to offer this fine volume of first rate scholarship illuminating why only a range of interpretative tools is likely to yield coherent and constructive understandings of our basic Charter.
- Drew S. Days III, Alfred M. Rankin Professor of Law, Yale Law School and former Solicitor General of the United States

This edited collection is a treasure trove for those who love the Constitution and believe that its greatest strength is that it was written in broad and majestic generalities intended to be adapted over time to the needs of future generations. Through such adaptation, the Constitution has endured for 220 years as the bedrock of the freest nation the world has ever known--while being amended only 27 times. The American Constitution Society has done a great service in promoting public understanding of these deep truths about our founding document. - Kathleen Sullivan, Stanley Morrison Professor of Law and Former Dean, Stanford Law School

And I do believe that the volume, that our distinguished authors here
have published now, is going to make a very important contribution to
that debate. It’s very carefully researched and reasoned, and very
measured, it’s among the best defenses of a non-originalist
interpretative methodology that I have ever seen. But it is my sad
responsibility, none the less, to say that the challenge it makes to
originalism I believe fails…
- Charles Cooper, Cooper and Kirk, former OLC head, Reagan administration


MEDIA COVERAGE OF THE NEW ACS BOOKS

 



At the ACS book launch, authors Liu and Karlan and editor Harris were
joined by Charles J. Cooper, a former assistant attorney general
in the Reagan administration, in a discussion of Keeping Faith
moderated by Slate Senior Editor Dahlia Lithwick at the National
Press Club. The American Constitution Society for Law and Policy is one
of the nation’s leading progressive legal organizations, comprised of
lawyers, judges, students and policy makers committed to promoting the
vitality of the Constitution and the fundamental values it expresses.
The views of the authors and speakers are their own and should not be
attributed to ACS.

 


PICTURES FROM THE BOOK LAUNCH






VIDEO FROM THE ACS CONVENTION




We the People

LIVE Simulcast: Wednesday Sept. 16, 12pm EDT/9am PDT

Click Here to View Live Simulcast

QuickTime software is required to view the event live which can be downloaded for free here.

ACS is hosting a live simulcast from UC Berkeley School of Law on the issues addressed by three new books: Keeping Faith with the Constitution; It is a Constitution We Are Expounding; and The Constitution in 2020. These volumes were highlighted recently by the Wall Street Journal, New York Times and National Public Radio:

Keeping Faith with the Constitution articulates a vision of the
Constitution and an approach to interpretation that is faithful to the
words of the document and at the same time has enabled the Constitution
to retain its relevance for each new generation of Americans.

The simulcast will air Wednesday, September 16, 2009 at 12pm/9am EDT/PDT, including speakers Dr. John C. Eastman, Chapman University School of Law; Pamela S. Karlan, Stanford Law School; The Honorable William A. Fletcher, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit; and Moderator, Richard T. Ford, Stanford Law School. Speaker bios are available here.


Viewers are invited to submit questions via www.twitter.com/ACSLaw or by emailing campus@ACSLaw.org.

Register here to attend the event live at Boalt Hall!



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