Class conflict : the pursuit and history of American justice / Gregory C. Leavitt.
2017
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Author
Title
Class conflict : the pursuit and history of American justice / Gregory C. Leavitt.
Imprint
London : Routledge, 2017.
Description
1 online resource (xiii, 249 pages)
Formatted Contents Note
chapter 1 American Justice and Social Class: An Introduction / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 2 Eighteenth-Century America: The Pre-Revolutionary Era / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 3 The Making of the Constitution / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 4 The Constitutional Convention / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 5 The Bill of Rights: Origins and Early Federalist Resistance / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 6 The Rise of the Middle Class / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 7 The Party-Democratic Period: 1830s to 1930s / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 8 The American Justice and Due Process Revolutions / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 9 Class Conflict in the Early Twenty-First Century / Gregory C. Leavitt.
chapter 2 Eighteenth-Century America: The Pre-Revolutionary Era / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 3 The Making of the Constitution / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 4 The Constitutional Convention / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 5 The Bill of Rights: Origins and Early Federalist Resistance / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 6 The Rise of the Middle Class / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 7 The Party-Democratic Period: 1830s to 1930s / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 8 The American Justice and Due Process Revolutions / Gregory C. Leavitt
chapter 9 Class Conflict in the Early Twenty-First Century / Gregory C. Leavitt.
Summary
"In a just society the law not only applies to all equally, but also arises from the consent of the people it embraces. As such, justice implies that people have access to governance. A just society provides and guards social and individual rights for all its members. The freedom of speech, therefore, is a right of all, and society has institutionalized processes to guarantee that freedom.Due to the American people's understanding of exclusion and rank, the meaning of justice was fragmented by social status and class. While this book views American justice through a prism of social-class conflict, Gregory C. Leavitt argues that it would be incorrect to portray this perspective as somehow whole. American justice is relative to many cultural groupings and conditions and is thus at the same distance from its encompassing ideal understood by common Americans.Beginning with the late eighteenth century and ending in the late twentieth century, Leavitt traces the history of class conflict and the struggle for justice among Americans. He argues that class struggles remain a significant factor in American social problems, because the American situation grew out of government promises of freedom and liberty to the lower class and the development of a powerful middle class. This is a provocative contribution to the debate over the future of social justice in America."--Provided by publisher.
Note
First published 2013 by Transaction Publishers.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 239-243) and index.
Location
www
Available in Other Form
Print version:
Linked Resources
Alternate Title
Taylor & Francis Online
Language
English
ISBN
9781315081137 (e-book : PDF)
9781351528177 (e-book: Mobi)
9781412849791 (hardback)
9781412862394 (paperback)
9781351528177 (e-book: Mobi)
9781412849791 (hardback)
9781412862394 (paperback)
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