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William J. Quirk has written 11 work(s)
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Cover for 9783642702266 Cover for 9781412818650 Cover for 9781412807739 Cover for 9781412811446 Cover for 9780202308845 Cover for 9781560009269 Cover for 9780819184597 Cover for 9781568330228 Cover for 9781878375414 Cover for 9780080348018 Cover for 9780080325705 Cover for 9783540151029
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By William J. Quirk (editor)

Paperback:

9783642702266 | Reprint edition (Springer-Verlag New York Inc, December 6, 2011), cover price $129.00

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By Malcolm E. Jewell (editor) and William J. Quirk (introduced by)

Paperback:

9781412818650 | Aldine De Gruyter, November 15, 2011, cover price $52.95

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By Ralph Nader (foreword by) and William J. Quirk

Hardcover:

9781412807739, titled "Courts & Congress: America's Unwritten Constitution" | Transaction Pub, May 31, 2008, cover price $55.95

Paperback:

9781412811446, titled "Courts & Congress: America's Unwritten Constitution" | Reprint edition (Transaction Pub, January 31, 2010), cover price $35.95 | also contains Courts and Congress: America's Unwritten Constitution

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By John W. Chapman (editor), J. Roland Pennock (editor) and William J. Quirk (introduced by)

Paperback:

9780202308845 | Aldine De Gruyter, February 15, 2007, cover price $40.95

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American society has undergone a revolution within a revolution. Until the 1960s, America was a liberal country in the traditional sense of legislative and executive checks and balances. Since then, the Supreme Court has taken on the role of the protector of individual rights against the will of the majority by creating, in a series of decisions, new rights for criminal defendants, atheists, homosexuals, illegal aliens, and others. Repeatedly, on a variety of cases, the Court has overturned the actions of local police or state laws under which local officials are acting. The result, according to Quirk and Birdwell, is freedom for the lawless and oppression for the law abiding. Judicial Dictatorship challenges the status quo, arguing that in many respects the Supreme Court has assumed authority far beyond the original intent of the Founding Fathers. In order to avoid abuse of power, the three branches of the American government were designed to operate under a system of checks and balances. However, this balance has been upset. The Supreme Court has become the ultimate arbiter in the legal system through exercise of the doctrine of judicial review, which allows the court to invalidate any state or federal law it considers inconsistent with the constitution. Supporters of judicial review believe that there has to be a final arbiter of constitutional interpretation, and the Judiciary is the most suitable choice. Opponents, Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln among them, believed that judicial review assumes the judicial branch is above the other branches, a result the Constitution did not intend. The democratic paradox is that the majority in America agreed to limit its own power. Jefferson believed that the will of the majority must always prevail. His faith in the common man led him to advocate a weak national government, one that derived its power from the people. Alexander Hamilton, often Jefferson’s adversary, lacking such faith, feared “the amazing violence and turbulence of the democratic spirit.” This led him to believe in a strong national government, a social and economic aristocracy, and finally, judicial review. This conflict has yet to be resolved. Judicial Dictatorship discusses the issue of who will decide if government has gone beyond its proper powers. That issue, in turn, depends on whether the Jeffersonian or Hamiltonian view of the nature of the person prevails. In challenging customary ideological alignments of conservative and liberal doctrine, Judicial Dictatorship will be of interest to students and professionals in law, political scientists, and those interested in U.S. history.

Hardcover:

9781560002253 | Transaction Pub, April 1, 1995, cover price $40.95 | About this edition: American society has undergone a revolution within a revolution.

Paperback:

9781560009269 | Transaction Pub, October 1, 1996, cover price $30.95

Hardcover:

9781567060751 | 2 lslf edition (Panel Pub, October 1, 1994), cover price $128.00

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Product Description: Law professors Quirk and Bridwell give their take on how the interests of the American middle class have been ignored by a political, economical, and academic oligarchy currently running the country.

Hardcover:

9780819184597 | Madison Books, March 1, 1992, cover price $23.95 | About this edition: Argues that recent policies have subverted constitutional democracy

Paperback:

9781568330228 | Reissue edition (Madison Books, September 1, 1993), cover price $18.95 | About this edition: Law professors Quirk and Bridwell give their take on how the interests of the American middle class have been ignored by a political, economical, and academic oligarchy currently running the country.

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Hardcover:

9781878375414 | 3 lslf edition (Panel Pub, June 1, 1992), cover price $128.00

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Product Description: W.J.Quirk 1.1 Real-time software and the real world Real-time software and the real world are inseparably related. Real time cannot be turned back and the real world will not always forget its history. The consequences of previous influences may last for a long time and the undesired effects may range from being inconvenient to disastrous in both economic and human terms...read more

Hardcover:

9783540151029 | Gardners Books, March 1, 1985, cover price $111.15 | About this edition: W.

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