Supreme Court Policymaking and Race

Origins and Development

Barbara L Graham author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:State University of New York Press

Published:1st Mar '26

Should be back in stock very soon

Supreme Court Policymaking and Race cover

Examines the origins and development of US Supreme Court policymaking in the area of race between 1801 and 2024.

Supreme Court Policymaking and Race presents a comprehensive and systematic account of the exercise of power by the US Supreme Court in deciding racial policy conflicts beginning with the Marshall Court and ending with the Roberts Court. Author Barbara L. Graham draws upon three related analytic frameworks to evaluate the extent to which the Court's decisions have protected the constitutional and statutory rights of people of color: institutional racial orders, partisan regimes, and jurisprudential regimes. Based on an empirical analysis of the outcomes in 441 race cases decided over fourteen chief justice tenures, Graham provides strong evidence for the claim that with the exception of a fifty-six-year period (1930 until 1986), the Supreme Court has acted as a foe, not a friend, to the rights of people of color. The findings show that when egalitarian political coalitions are in control at the national level, the Court is more likely to further their racial policy goals to protect the legal rights of people of color.

"Graham's book is a stunning work of scholarship. Contrary to the view that the Court acts as protector and guardian of individual rights and liberties, Supreme Court Policymaking and Race demonstrates that the Court, overall and excepting the Warren and Burger Courts, has been a single-minded instrument of social oppression of Black and minority individuals and a premier promoter of White supremacy in the United States." — Isaac Unah, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

ISBN: 9798855805864

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 549g

316 pages