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| Constitutional Law: Themes for the Constitution's Third Century, 4th (American Casebooks) |  | Authors: Daniel A. Farber, William N. Eskridge, Jr., Philip P. Frickey Publisher: West Category: Book
List Price: $174.00 Buy Used: $70.00 as of 9/6/2010 19:15 CDT details You Save: $104.00 (60%)
New (14) Used (25) from $70.00
Seller: lawstudentseller34 Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 56,545
Media: Hardcover Edition: 4 Pages: 1425 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 5 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 7.7 x 2.1
ISBN: 0314184457 Dewey Decimal Number: 342.73 EAN: 9780314184450 ASIN: 0314184457
Publication Date: June 1, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description With its distinctively contemporary focus, this book uses cutting-edge issues in constitutional law to introduce students to the ongoing debates about the Supreme Court and its proper role in American society. This edition includes the latest decisions on the War on Terror, gay marriage, federalism, property rights, free speech, and discrimination law. It also includes enriched historical materials and complete coverage of all the major doctrinal areas.
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| Customer Reviews: con law casebook June 6, 2008 Dagmarelga (Jacksonville, North Carolina United States) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Prior to purchasing this casebook I looked over the website reviews and read one which recommended just copying the cases for class over buying the book. The reviewer felt the commentary was minimal and not worthwhile. I disagree. There is a substantial amount of editorial commentary, albeit not easy reading and sometimes presumptive of knowledge, and the cases are edited. Not buying the casebook is a risky approach if this is your assigned text. A good adjuvant for better understanding the material is the Chemerinsky treatise (Aspen).
Useless casebook May 11, 2008 EJR (Boston, MA USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is useless. As a naive 1L I wasted my time diligently trying to read the cases. By the end of the semester I finally realized that Chemerinsky's treatise told me everything I needed to know in about 25% of the words.
I agree with the previous reviewer's point that the text between cases is NOT analysis. It is just filler that is unenlightening. Save your money. Buy Chemerinsky's treatise instead. Don'just take my word for it: check out the average Amazon rating and the number of reviews for his treatise.
Terrible waste of money June 24, 2007 J. Ocampo (New York) 4 out of 8 found this review helpful
I'm just trying to tell you how to save 100 bucks. Don't buy this book. It is nothing special, it's just a book full of Supreme Court cases.
Supreme Court cases are published everywhere, you can type the parties of almost any case into a search engine and get a complete text of a case online for FREE. Some textbooks are assembled in a manner that helps the student understand the most important aspects of a body of law. This book does not do this. All it does is present the cases in an unorganized form. The author doesn't even bother to sum up the current body of Constitutional Law. He just mechanically presents the cases and asks rhetorical questions.
There is no reason for you to dish out a bill to get this worthless book. The analysis between Supreme Court cases is NOT really analysis. The pathetic author just asks rhetorical questions about the ruling and they contribute NOTHING to understanding the body of Constitutional Law.
If you are a student on a budget, don't buy this book. Look at your Constitutional Law class syllabus, see which cases you are discussing, and pull them up on the web.
If you are a trust baby, then buy this book so you can look like part of the crowd. But if you'd rather spend the hundred bucks on something else, then don't waste your money.
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