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Philip Hamburger

    Ein Gelehrter des Verfassungsrechts und seiner Geschichte, dessen Werk die Feinheiten der Verwaltungsbefugnisse untersucht. Mit einem umfassenden akademischen Hintergrund an renommierten juristischen Fakultäten bietet seine Forschung tiefe Einblicke in die Entwicklung und Anwendung rechtlicher Rahmenbedingungen. Seine wissenschaftlichen Beiträge haben erhebliche Anerkennung für ihre Tiefe und Wirkung auf das Verständnis von Regierungsführung erhalten.

    Purchasing Submission
    Is Administrative Law Unlawful?
    Separation of Church and State
    Matters of State
    • 2021

      Government's use of largess to secure consent to conditions all too often serves as an illicit pathway of power. This mode of control is part of the contemporary reality of American governance, and it therefore needs to be recognized alongside more familiar sorts of power, such as rule through law and administrative power.

      Purchasing Submission
    • 2015
    • 2004

      Separation of Church and State

      • 528 Seiten
      • 19 Lesestunden
      3,9(50)Abgeben

      Hamburger argues that separation of church and state has no historical foundation in the First Amendment and shows that eighteenth-century Americans almost never invoked this principle. Although Jefferson and others retrospectively claimed a First Amendment basis for separation, it became part of American constitutional law only much later.

      Separation of Church and State
    • 2003

      Matters of State

      • 194 Seiten
      • 7 Lesestunden
      3,0(2)Abgeben

      Focusing on Washington inaugurations from FDR to Clinton, Hamburger presents a unique collection of essays that capture the significance and atmosphere of these historic events. Through his distinctive lens, he explores the political and cultural implications of each inauguration, offering insights into the evolving nature of American democracy. This compilation not only highlights the ceremonies themselves but also reflects on the broader societal changes that accompany each new presidential term.

      Matters of State