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Glass and Gavel: The U.S. Supreme Court and Alcohol

Product ID : 37594965


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About Glass And Gavel: The U.S. Supreme Court And Alcohol

Product Description In Glass and Gavel, noted legal expert Nancy Maveety has written the first book devoted to alcohol in the nation’s highest court of law, the United States Supreme Court. Combining an examination of the justices’ participation in the social use of alcohol across the Court’s history with a survey of the Court’s decisions on alcohol regulation, Maveety illustrates the ways in which the Court has helped to construct the changing culture of alcohol. “Intoxicating liquor” is one of the few things so plainly material to explicitly merit mention, not once, but twice, in the amendments to the U.S. Constitution. Maveety shows how much of our constitutional law—Supreme Court rulings on the powers of government and the rights of individuals—has been shaped by our American love/hate relationship with the bottle and the barroom.From the tavern as a judicial meeting space, to the bootlegger as both pariah and patriot, to the individual freedom issue of the sobriety checkpoint—there is the Supreme Court, adjudicating but also partaking in the temper(ance) of the times. In an entertaining and accessible style, Maveety shows that what the justices say and do with respect to alcohol provides important lessons about their times, our times, and our “constitutional cocktail” of limited governmental power and individual rights. Review Highly Recommended: Alcohol consumption in the US has often led to regulation through legislative action, prompting a range of Supreme Court cases arguing the legal and moral limits of legalized drinking. Maveety (Tulane) not only discusses many of the legal decisions handed down by the high court regarding alcohol but also examines how the justices’ decisions reflected their own drinking habits. Starting with antebellum judges in the period of frontier moonshine and ending with modern justices in the era of anti–drunk driving laws, Glass and Gavel contains numerous examples of how the court defined the rights of citizens to imbibe against a background of how the justices themselves preferred their cocktails. The book embraces many historical trends in American drinking, from periods when Prohibition was the law to the modern craft-beer boom. The anecdotes about the justices’ drinking habits are illuminating and interesting, but the book's real strength is Maveety’s analysis of the various alcohol-related cases examined. Any legal history is best judged by its ability to convey complex legal theories in a clear manner, and Maveety excels in this regard. ― CHOICE This swift-moving, thoroughly-researched, and useful (it contains recipes!) analysis of the often-tempestuous relationship between alcohol and constitutional law is a useful addition to the canon, not only because its history is unique–to my knowledge this the first extensive history of the Supreme Court’s alcohol rulings–but its format is unique as well. By combining a summary of the Court’s rulings with insightful drinking biographies of the justices themselves, Maveety has crafted a story that shows how America’s alcohol laws have shifted over time, alongside revealing portraits of how our country’s drinking culture has evolved along with, or in spite of, the legal landscape. . . . By emphasizing a token cocktail or liquor for each era, Glass and Gavel is part history and part pairing-guide. With a well-stocked bar and an experimental spirit, you could easily have a very fun reading party. ― Points: The Blog of The Alcohol & Drugs History Society [Maveety} traces the justices' drinking habits through time and the court's voluminous alcohol-related jurisprudence in her informative and thoroughly entertaining history ― Washington Independent Review of Books "Nancy Maveety has written a gem of a book that simultaneously entertains while offering fresh insights into the development of American law, culture and politics. By ingeniously combining an amusing look at the drinking habits of individual justices on the U.S. Supreme