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Rule Of Law The Jurisprudence Of Liberty In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries 1st Edition John Phillip Reid

  • SKU: BELL-52245498
Rule Of Law The Jurisprudence Of Liberty In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries 1st Edition John Phillip Reid
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Rule Of Law The Jurisprudence Of Liberty In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries 1st Edition John Phillip Reid instant download after payment.

Publisher: Northern Illinois University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 9.18 MB
Pages: 157
Author: John Phillip Reid
ISBN: 9780875803272, 087580327X
Language: English
Year: 2004
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Rule Of Law The Jurisprudence Of Liberty In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries 1st Edition John Phillip Reid by John Phillip Reid 9780875803272, 087580327X instant download after payment.

"Rule of law"—the idea that the law is the nation's sovereign authority—has served as a cornerstone for constitutional theory and the jurisprudence of liberty. When law reigns over governors and the governed alike, a citizen need not fear capricious monarchs, arbitrary judges, or calculating bureaucrats. When a citizen obeys the law, life, liberty, and property are safe; when a citizen disobeys, the law alone will determine the appropriate punishment.
While the rule of law's English roots can be found in the Middle Ages, its governing doctrine rose to power during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. John Phillip Reid traces the concept's progress through a series of landmark events in Great Britain and North America: the trial of Charles I, the creation of the Mayflower Compact, the demand for a codification of the laws in John Winthrop's Massachusetts Bay Colony, and an attempt to harness the Puritan Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell to the rule of law by crowning him king. The American Revolution, the culmination of two centuries of political foment, marked the greatest victory for rule of law.
Even as Reid tells this triumphal story, he argues that we must not take for granted what the expression "rule of law" meant. Rather, if we are to understand its nuances, we must closely examine the historical context as well as the intentions of those who invoked it as a doctrine. He makes a convincing case; along the way, he employs generous quotations from key documents to fortify his sometimes startling insights. This combination of solid scholarship and intellectual agility is nothing less than what readers have come to expect from this eminent legal historian.

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