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34 J. Sup. Ct. Hist. v (2009)

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Introduction
        Melvin   I. Urofsky


    The other day I was looking at the Court's
docket for this year, and realized that while the
specifics may have changed-there are more
cases dealing with technology, for example-
the heart of the docket is what it has been
for more than eight decades: important ques-
tions of constitutional and statutory interpre-
tation. In the course of recent research, I read
through some volumes of US. Reports for the
mid-1920s, before the Judges' Bill of 1925
took force and reoriented the Court. While
one would run across the occasional case that
would have been important in any Term, a vast
majority of the cases involved matters of pri-
vate law or obscure state regulation. Chief Jus-
tice William Howard Taft wanted to make the
Court primarily a constitutional tribunal, and
he succeeded brilliantly. It is hard to believe
that a historian reading about the cases during
the Rehnquist and Roberts eras would dismiss
the vast majority of them as unimportant.
    The  Court  itself, of course, since the
founding of the nation, has been critical to
the successful operation of the great experi-
ment, and this issue looks at some of those
events in which the Court played a part. In


some  instances, it did so through expound-
ing principles in a decision, and Thomas Cox
examines one of the most important of those
cases, Gibbons v. Ogden. Moreover, as histo-
rians have understood for a long time, it is
not only the jurisprudential issue that counts,
but also how that decision plays out against
the context of changing economic and social
conditions. Mr. Cox does an admirable job of
explicating this.
    The  Supreme  Court never ruled on the
Alien and  Sedition Acts of 1798, but mat-
ters arising under America's first internal se-
curity act did come up before some of the
lower courts. Given how active the judiciary
is regarding current security measures, Arthur
Garrison's examination of how judges treated
the early laws is instructive.
    In the last issue of the Journal, we ran
the first part of Theodore Vestal's exami-
nation of how the Court during the Warren
years engaged in public diplomacy, a role then
somewhat  alien to the Justices. Since then, of
course, members of our High Court have be-
come  familiar figures as they travel overseas
during the summer recess and speak to jurists


v

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