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Works
of John Marshall
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Barrett, Edward L. “Why the Constitution survives: long-term view of the Court.” Trial 25 (December 1989): 30-5. Brookhiser, Richard. "Plots and executive privilege: Jefferson and Burr squared off first in a Trial about high treason." U.S. News and World Report 124 (March 1998): 24. Campbell, A.I.L. "'It is a Constitution we are expounding': Chief Justice Marshall and the necessary and proper clause." The Journal of Legal History 12 (December 1991):190-245. Carrico, Harry L. "George Mason, John Marshall, and the Constitution." Military Law Review 121 (Summer 1988): 1-16. Clinton, Robert Lowry. “John Marshall’s federalism: a reply to Professor Gillman.” Political Research Quarterly 47 (December 1994): 887-90. Clinton, Robert Lowry. “Judicial review, nationalism, and the commerce clause:contrasting Antebellum and postbellum Supreme Court decision making.” Political Research Quarterly 47 (December 1994): 857-76. Crawford, Peter Ian. “The Cinema of John Marshall.” Man 29 (September 1994): 783-4. Cross, J. L. “On the French Revolution and on American politics.” William and Mary Quarterly 12 (October 1955): 631-49. Engdahl, David E. "John Marshall's 'Jeffersonian' concept of judicial review." Duke Law Journal 42 (November 1992): 279-339. “Failure of contract as justification.” Social Theory and Practice 3 (Fall 1975): 441-59. Faulkner, R.K. “John Marshall and the Burr trial.” Journal of American History 53 (Summer 1966): 247-58. Frickey, Philip P."Marshalling past and present: colonialism, constitutionalism, and interpretation in federal Indian law." Harvard Law Review 107 (December 1993): 381- 440. Frish, M. J. “John Marshall’s philosophy of constitutional republicanism.” Review of Politics 20 (January 1958): 34-45. Garvey, G. “Constitutional revolution of 1837 and the myth of Marshall’s monolith.” Western Political Quarterly 18 (March 1965): 27-34. Gillman, Howard. “More on the origins of the Fuller court’s jurisprudence: reexamining the scope of federal power over commerce and manufacturing in nineteenth-century constitutional law.” Political Research Quarterly 49 (June 1996): 415-37. Gillman, Howard. “The struggle over Marshall and the politics of constitutional history.” Political Research Quarterly 47 (December 1994): 877-86. Graber, Mark A. “Establishing judicial review? Schooner Peggy and the early Marshall Court.” Political Research Quarterly 51 (March 1998): 221-39. Hobson, Charles F. "John Marshall and his papers." Journal of Supreme Court History 2 (1996): 30-5. Hobson, Charles F. "John Marshall and the Fairfax (Fairfax's Devisee v. Hunter's Lessee, 11 U.S. (7Cranch) 603 (1813)) litigation: the background of Martin v. Hunter's Lessee (14U.S. (1 Wheat) 304 (1816))." Journal of Supreme Court History 2 (1996): 36-50. Iredale, D.A. “John and Thomas Marshall and the society for improving the salt trade: an example of trade regulation. Economic History Review 20 (April 1967): 79-93 . King, Kimi Lynn, and James Meernik. “The ‘sole organ’ before the Court: presidential power in foreign policy cases, 1790-1996.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 28 (Summer 1998): 666-86. Knight, Jack, and Lee Epstein. “On the struggle for judicial supremacy.” Law and Society Review 30 (1996): 87-120. Massey, Jonathan S. “Why tradition supports punitive damages: and how the defense bar Misreads history. Trial 31 (September 1995): 18-19. Mendelson, Wallace. “John Marshall and the sugar trust—a reply to Professor Gillman.” Political Research Quarterly 49( June 1996): 405-13. Mendelson, Wallace. “Nullification via dual federalism a second response to Professor Gillman.” Political Research Quarterly (June 1996): 439-44. Olken, Samuel R. "Chief Justice John Marshall in historical perspective." The John Marshall Law Review 31 (Fall 1997): 137-70. Olken, Samuel R. "John Marshall and Spencer Roane: historical analysis of their conflict over U.S. Supreme Court appellate jurisdiction." Journal of Supreme Court History (1990 1990): 125-41. Orth, John V. "John Marshall and the rule of law." South Carolina Law Review 49 (Spring 1998): 633-49. Padover, K. “Political ideas of John Marshall.” Social Research 26 (Spring 1959): 47-70. Renquist, William H. "The Courts and the Constitution." Temple Law Quarterly 60 (Winter 1987): 829-34. Robertson, Lindsay G. "John Marshall as colonial historian: reconsidering the origins of the Discovery doctrine." The Journal of Law and Politics 13 (Fall 1997): 759-77. Sabin, Arthur J. "Why we honor John Marshall-a brief retrospective." The John Marshall Law Review 29 (Winter 1996): 567-74. Secola, Joseph P. "The judicial review of John Marshall and its subsequent development in American jurisprudence." University of Bridgeport Law Review 9 (1988): 11-57. Secola, Joseph P. "The judicial review of John Marshall and its subsequent development in American jurisprudence." Lincoln Law Review 18 (1988): 1-48. Seddig, Robert G. "John Marshall and the origins of Supreme Court leadership." Yearbook (Supreme Court Historical Society ) 1991(1991): 63-85. Shevory, Thomas C. "John Marshall's law: interpretation, ideology, and interest." Contributions In legal studies Sloan, Herbert. Rev. of John Marshall, by Jean Edward Smith. Political Science Quarterly 112 (Fall 1997): 526. Steamer, R. “Congress and the Supreme court during the Marshall era.” Review of Politics 27 (July 1965): 364-85. Taylor,
John B. “The Supreme Court and political eras: a perspective on judicial
power in a democratic polity.” The Review of Politics 54 (Summer 1992):
345-68
Wood, Sandra L, Linda Camp Keith, and Drew Noble Lanier. “’Acclimation effects’ for Supreme Court justices: a cross-validation, 1888-1940. American Journal of Political Science 42 (April 1998): 690-7.
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