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12 Bimonthly Rev. L. Books 1 (2001)

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Bimonthly Review


Of Law Books


http://www.law.suffolk.edu/faculty/ebander/indexl0-12-00.html
Volume  12 Number  1 January-February  2001


AN   INTERVIEW WITH G. EDWARD WHITE,
PROFESSOR OF LAW, UNIVERSITY OF
VIRGINIA LAW SCHOOL, and author of:
        The   Constitution  and  the New   Deal. G.
Edward   White.   Cambridge, Harvard University
Press, 2000. 385 p. 0-674-00341-1  $45.00

Q: I would characterize your book as a blend of history,
constitutional law, and jurisprudence. Do you agree with
that characterization?

A: My  focus in the book is primarily historical, but it is,
certainly fair to characterize it as having implications for
contemporary  constitutional law and jurisprudence. I
don't think that decisions in constitutional law can be
isolated from the context in which those decisions are
made,   which   necessarily includes  the   historical
underpinnings of  those decisions. In other words, I
believe that contemporary constitutional decisions are
made  against a backdrop of decisions in the past, and
those past decisions play a role in framing the issues at
stake in current cases. I also don't think that the judicial
interpretations of the Constitution which are advanced in
current cases can be isolated from ideas about the proper
role for judges as constitutional interpreters. So, for me,
history and jurisprudence are vital, ongoing dimensions
of constitutional law. There is a constant dialogue, in
constitutional law, between the past and the present, and
that dialogue includes the interplay between past and
present theories of what constitutional interpretation by
judges is, or should be.
   Let me give an illustration of that general hypothesis
from the book. I am suggesting in the book that part of


the reason the relationship between the New Deal and
changes in early twentieth-century constitutional law has
been widely misunderstood is that the implicit criteria for
effective constitutional interpretation by judges have
changed,  resulting in some   early twentieth-century
judges, and their decisions, being seen as heroic and
visionary, and other judges, and their decisions, being
seen as obstructionist and benighted. The orthodox view
of the role of the judge in constitutional interpretation, as
late as the 1920s, was that judges, in a republican form of
government with a Constitution as the supreme source of
law, were the guardians of the fundamental principles of
the  Constitution  against encroachment   by   other
branches. If one held this view, the New Deal's efforts to
expand the powers of Congress and the Executive against
the states, or to create federal administrative agencies
whose decisions would have comparatively little legislative
oversight, appeared as massive  deviations from the
constitutional status quo that would trigger sharp judicial
scrutiny.
    But if judges are seen differently--as a set of political
actors in a democratic society who lack the popular
accountability of legislators or the Executive--the same
New  Deal  innovations appear to be popular mandates
that   require  accommodation    from   a   living
Constitution, whose  provisions are expected  to be
reinterpreted in accordance with the changing conditions
of American   life. Unelected judges should be  very
cautious in substituting their views of the meaning of the
Constitution--which amount to the views of nine largely
unaccountably human   beings--for those of legislative
majorities or popularly elected Executives. That was the
view  of  the role  of  the judge  in  constitutional
interpretation which became  orthodoxy in  American


In   This   Issue:
Interview with G. Edward   White      ..................
Interview with Michael  Rustad......      ............
C yberlaw  ...........................................................
Authors  of Books Reviewed.....................................
B ooks R eview ed...................................................
B ooks R eceived ....................................................
Nota  Bander................................



  Bimonthly Review ofLaw  Books / January-February 2001


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