Peter Charles Hoffer & Williamjames Hull Hoffer 
The Clamor of Lawyers [EPUB ebook] 
The American Revolution and Crisis in the Legal Profession

Apoio

The Clamor of Lawyers explores a series of extended public pronouncements that British North American colonial lawyers crafted between 1761 and 1776. Most, though not all, were composed outside of the courtroom and detached from on-going litigation. While they have been studied as political theory, these writings and speeches are rarely viewed as the work of active lawyers, despite the fact that key protagonists in the story of American independence were members of the bar with extensive practices. The American Revolution was, in fact, a lawyers’ revolution.

Peter Charles Hoffer and Williamjames Hull Hoffer broaden our understanding of the role that lawyers played in framing and resolving the British imperial crisis. The revolutionary lawyers, including John Adams’s idol James Otis, Jr., Pennsylvania’s John Dickinson, and Virginians Thomas Jefferson and Patrick Henry, along with Adams and others, deployed the skills of their profession to further the public welfare in challenging times. They were the framers of the American Revolution and the governments that followed. Loyalist lawyers and lawyers for the crown also participated in this public discourse, but because they lost out in the end, their arguments are often slighted or ignored in popular accounts. This division within the colonial legal profession is central to understanding the American Republic that resulted from the Revolution.

€28.99
Métodos de Pagamento

Tabela de Conteúdo

Preface
Introduction: A Lawyer’s Revolution
1. ‘The Worst Instrument of Arbitrary Power’
2. ‘The Alienation of the Affection of the Colonies’
3. ‘My Dear Countrymen Rouse Yourselves’
4. ‘A Right Which Nature Has Given to All Men’
5. ‘That These Colonies Are…Free and Independent States’
Conclusion: The Legacy of the Lawyers’ American Revolution
Notes
A Note on Sources
Index

Sobre o autor

Peter Charles Hoffer has taught early American history at Ohio State University, the University of Notre Dame, and Georgia, the latter since 1978. He is the author of John Quincy Adams and the Gag Rule, 1835–1850. Williamjames Hull Hoffer was a Henry Rutgers scholar at Rutgers University in New Brunswick before he entered law school, receiving both his J.D. and Ph.D. He now teaches at Seton Hall University. He is co-author of The Federal Courts: An Essential History.

Compre este e-book e ganhe mais 1 GRÁTIS!
Língua Inglês ● Formato EPUB ● Páginas 204 ● ISBN 9781501726095 ● Tamanho do arquivo 0.8 MB ● Editora Cornell University Press ● Cidade Ithaca ● País US ● Publicado 2018 ● Carregável 24 meses ● Moeda EUR ● ID 6673275 ● Proteção contra cópia Adobe DRM
Requer um leitor de ebook capaz de DRM

Mais ebooks do mesmo autor(es) / Editor

223.428 Ebooks nesta categoria