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Making Habeas Work

A Legal History

By (author) Eric M. Freedman
Format: Hardback
Publisher: New York University Press, New York, United States
Published: 12th Jun 2018
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 16mm
Weight: 491g
ISBN-10: 1479870978
ISBN-13: 9781479870974
Barcode No: 9781479870974
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An interesting question is whether history can truly prove anything about the validity of an individual court decision today, even if common-law practice is based on precedents. We know of a number of "precedents" once set by the Supreme Court that have since been overturned by that same Court because the common American understanding of decent social norms has changed over time. Be that as it may, Eric M. Freedman narrates dozens of cases since the colonial era, some in considerable detail, as related to habeas corpus or to a number of other legal proceedings by which the legality of detentions by local and government officials have been protested, prosecuted, and occasionally rejected in court, with fines levied. * Journal of American History * Focusing on the early history of habeas, and bringing it into dialogue with contemporary struggles, [Freedman] recaptures a lost history of legal remedies that functioned to free aggrieved individuals from the states coercive power. * Tulsa Law Review * Eric M. Freedman is one of the most important legal thinkers in the area of habeas corpus, and this book reaffirms that status. Keeping one foot in the present and the other firmly planted in the past, Freedman shows how, without the perspective of history, modern jurisprudence can and does go wrong. A compelling reformulation of our understanding of habeas based on extensive historical research. -- Austin Sarat,William Nelson Cromwell Professor Of Jurisprudence & Political Science, Amherst College Grounding his position in astonishing archival research, Professor Freedman provides a definitive account of habeas corpus as function rather than form. Freedman shows that the legal world in which the Framers of the Federal Constitution enshrined the habeas privilege embraced a collection of practices to check the States power to imprison its subjects. In an age when governments have become increasingly punitive, Freedmans comprehensive and readable work provides timely support for the liberty-protecting function of judges. -- Lee Kovarsky,Professor of Law, University of Maryland Carey Law School This impressive work of scholarship by one of the leading national experts on habeas corpus draws deeply on history to expand and enrich the modern understanding of the writ. The book is an invaluable resource for legal scholars, the judiciary, and the practicing bar. Its insights will almost certainly surprisereaders, just as they have surprised and informed us notwithstanding our long immersion in the topic. -- Randy Hertz and James S. Liebman, co-authors,Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Procedure * (LexisNexis 7th ed. & annual supplements) * Professor Eric Freedman has written a wonderful book explaining the historical and contemporary importance of habeas corpus in protecting liberty. The book is original in its research and also in its analysis, as Professor Freedman explains the role of habeas corpus in a system of checks and balances. This clearly written, thorough examination of habeas corpus is an important contribution to the literature of constitutional law, criminal procedure, and federal jurisdiction. -- Erwin Chemerinsky,Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor, University of California, Berkeley Law School Professor Eric Freedman charts a new habeas path: one that goes both backward and forward... Freedman uncovers a largely ignored history of habeas corpus. Armed with this broader understanding of habeas's past... judges and scholars will be better equipped to chart its future. * Harvard Law Review * As Professor Freedman demonstrates, sometimes judges do not ignore history to reach their goal-they rewrite it. * Westlaw *