To Form A More Perfect Union: A New Economic Interpretation of the United States ConstitutionMany important questions regarding the creation and adoption of the United States Constitution remain unresolved. Did slaveholdings or financial holdings significantly influence our Founding Fathers' stance on particular clauses or rules contained in the Constitution? Was there a division of support for the Constitution related to religious beliefs or ethnicity? Were founders from less commercial areas more likely to oppose the Constitution? To Form a More Perfect Union successfully answers these questions and offers an economic explanation for the behavior of our Founding Fathers during the nation's constitutional founding. In 1913, American historian Charles A. Beard controversially argued in his book An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States that the framers and ratifiers of the Constitution were less interested in furthering democratic principles than in advancing specific economic and financial interests. Beard's thesis eventually emerged as the standard historical interpretation and remained so until the 1950s. Since then, many constitutional and historical scholars have questioned an economic interpretation of the Constitution as being too narrow or too calculating, believing the great principles and political philosophies that motivated the Founding Fathers to be worthier subjects of study. In this meticulously researched reexamination of the drafting and ratification of our nation's Constitution, Robert McGuire argues that Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, George Mason and the other Founding Fathers did act as much for economic motives as for abstract ideals. To Form a More Perfect Union offers compelling evidence showing that the economic, financial, and other interests of the founders can account for the specific design and adoption of our Constitution. This is the first book to provide modern evidence that substantiates many of the overall conclusions found in Charles Beard's An Economic Interpretation while challenging and overturning other of Beard's specific findings. To Form a More Perfect Union presents an entirely new approach to the study of the shaping of the U.S. Constitution. Through the application of economic thinking and rigorous statistical techniques, as well as the processing of vast amounts of data on the economic interests and personal characteristics of the Founding Fathers, McGuire convincingly demonstrates that an economic interpretation of the Constitution is valid. Radically challenging the prevailing views of most historians, political scientists, and legal scholars, To Form a More Perfect Union provides a wealth of new findings about the Founding Fathers' constitutional choices and sheds new light on the motivations behind the design and adoption of the United States Constitution. |
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Continguts
15 | |
33 | |
The Philadelphia Convention of 1787 | 47 |
The Choice of Specific Clauses in the Constitution | 49 |
Another Look at the Choice of Specific Clauses | 94 |
The Choice of the Basic Design of the Constitution | 109 |
The Ratification of the Constitution 17871790 | 129 |
The Overall Ratification Vote in the Nation | 131 |
The Data and Their Sources | 239 |
Full and Parsimonious Voting Models for the Philadelphia Convention | 254 |
PersonalInterest and ConstituentInterest Voting Models for the Philadelphia Convention | 266 |
Alternative Voting Model and Hypothesis Tests for Nationalism at the Philadelphia Convention | 272 |
Voting Models for Pooled Samples of the State Ratifying Conventions | 275 |
Voting Models for Massachusetts North Carolina and Virginia Ratifying Conventions | 296 |
Notes | 333 |
References | 363 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
To Form a More Perfect Union: A New Economic Interpretation of the United ... Robert Allen McGuire Previsualització limitada - 2003 |
To Form A More Perfect Union: A New Economic Interpretation of the United ... Robert A. McGuire Previsualització limitada - 2003 |
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actual alternative analysis appear appendix areas average Beard behavior calculated chapter characteristics choice citizens conclusions Congress considered consistent Constitution contained Debtor delegate's delegates determine discussion Distance economic interests effect employed English ancestry Equals estimated example existing expected Explanatory Variables Farmer favor findings founders Founding framers Hampshire historical hypothesis ideology impact important included indicate individuals influence issue James John laws less marginal Massachusetts McDonald mean measures Merchant miles Model Specifications navigable water NC NC NC North Carolina Note Number observations Officer otherwise overall Owner paper money particular percent Philadelphia convention political population position predicted probability present prohibition public securities holdings ratification vote ratifying conventions reported in table represented respectively rules sample sample means share slaveholdings Slaveowner slaves Slaves per 100 Statistically significant studies suggests tests Thomas tion trade United Value of public Virginia wealth Western landowner whites yes vote
Referències a aquest llibre
Hamilton Unbound: Finance and the Creation of the American Republic Robert Eric Wright Previsualització limitada - 2002 |
A History of Macroeconomic Policy in the United States John H. Wood Previsualització no disponible - 2008 |