Modern Federalist Papers, Volume I

Papers No. 1-40: The Opening Constitutional Inquiry
144 Seiten, Taschenbuch
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Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

Can a written republic remain self-correcting?

Modern Federalist Papers, Volume I gathers the opening forty papers of a larger constitutional inquiry. Written in a restrained Federalist style, these essays examine the conditions by which free government preserves liberty across time: institutional architecture, republican capacity, material independence, and constitutional meaning.

The volume asks how constitutional machinery can remain visible, divided, and correctable; how citizens and representatives form judgment; how property, labor, commerce, taxation, debt, and public credit shape republican independence; and how law, courts, precedent, amendment, and public judgment preserve the continuity of a written Constitution.

The argument is architectural rather than accusatory. It is less concerned with passing personalities than with the durable forms, habits, obligations, and meanings by which a republic remains capable of correction.

For readers interested in constitutional government, political philosophy, republican self-government, American institutions, and the continuing question of liberty under law, this volume offers a serious and nonpartisan reflection on whether a free people can still govern themselves through constitutional means.