Skip to main content

Constitutional Law II: Civil and Political Rights (333-0-1)

Instructors

Joanna Grisinger
847 491 3987
620 Lincoln St #201

Meeting Info

University Hall 101: Tues, Thurs 2:00PM - 3:20PM

Overview of class

Legal St 333-0-20 Constitutional Law II, Prof. Joanna Grisinger

"A court is a body of judges whose decisions are either: (1) right, (2) caused by the fault of someone else (usually the legislature), or (3) unfortunate but unavoidable accidents due to the circumstance that no human system can be perfect." - Thurman Arnold
"No matter whether th' Constitution follows th' flag or not, th' Supreme Court follows the election returns." - "Mr. Dooley" (Finley Peter Dunne)
"The Supreme Court should never be affected by the weather of the day, but inevitably, it is affected by the climate of the era." - Paul Freund
This course investigates the civil rights and civil liberties protected by the Constitution and defined by the U.S. Supreme Court. It will also examine the many controversies over what, exactly, the Constitution means, who gets to decide, and how.

Registration Requirements

Attendance at first class required. Taught with POLI SCI 333; may not receive credit for both courses.
Prerequisite: POLI_SCI 220-0 or POLI_SCI 230-0

Please note: Constitutional Law I is not a prerequisite for this class. They can be taken in any order

Learning Objectives

. By the end of the quarter, students should be able to:
• recognize and articulate the relationship between the Supreme Court's constitutional decision making; broader social, political, and economic factors; and the behaviors of individuals and groups (especially lawyers and Supreme Court justices);
• be able to evaluate and analyze Supreme Court decisions through careful evaluation of their major assertions, assumptions, evidential basis, and explanatory utility;
• understand and explain the evolution of constitutional doctrine in Supreme Court decision making over time, in order to observe, describe, understand, and (maybe) predict the Supreme Court's behavior;
• reflect on how theories about judicial decision making can help us understand (and obscure) the Supreme Court's approach to contemporary social issues like privacy, equality, voting rights, freedom of expression, and freedom of religion;
• be able to explain the Supreme Court's important role in constructing and enforcing formal categories of (and protections regarding) ability, age, education, ethnicity, gender, nationality, race, religion, politics, sexuality, and social status, often in overlapping and intersecting ways; and
• understand the Supreme Court's role in defining the formal legal parameters of racism and anti-racism, power and resistance, justice and injustice, equality and inequality, agency and subjection, and belonging and subjection in ways that shape both its own decision making and broader political and social understandings of these concepts.

Evaluation Method

participation, midterm and final exam, brief check in assignments

Class Attributes

Social and Behavioral Science Foundational Discipl
U.S. Perspectives on Power, Justice, and Equity
Social & Behavioral Sciences Distro Area

Associated Classes

DIS - Parkes Hall 212: Wed 12:00PM - 12:50PM

DIS - University Hall 312: Wed 1:00PM - 1:50PM