Lexington Books
Pages: 254
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-6838-7 • Hardback • June 2013 • $113.00 • (£87.00)
978-1-4985-1544-3 • Paperback • March 2015 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
978-0-7391-8386-1 • eBook • June 2013 • $55.00 • (£42.00)
Darren Patrick Guerra is an associate professor of political science at Biola University where he teaches courses on Constitutional Law and American Politics. He formerly taught at Vanguard University of Southern California.
Preface
Part I Creation of Article V
Chapter 1: Perfecting the Constitution
Chapter 2: Constitutional Revolution
Chapter 3: An Ultimate Remedy: Creating and Ratifying Article V
Chapter 4: The Founder’s Article V Consensus
Part II Criticism of Article V
Chapter 5: The Progressive Challenge to Article V
Chapter 6: The Critics: Article V is Too Difficult
Chapter 7: The Critics: Article V is Undemocratic
Chapter 8: The Critics: Article V is Too Formal
Chapter 9: Conclusion: The Case for Article V
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Guerra (Biola Univ.) posits that the Article V provisions for formally amending the US Constitution are under attack from scholars, judges, and politicians. He argues that many of these individuals seek to amend the Constitution through permissive 'interpretation' rather than formal amendment. However, the author writes that Article V is not only a form of amendment but the exclusive form of amendment to the Constitution. Other forms, he suggests, do not comport with history or logic. Part 1 of this work examines the history and context of Article V, while part 2 defends Article V from its critics. Whether readers agree or disagree with Guerra's premise, this work makes for interesting reading and is recommended for those who study constitutional law. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers, undergraduate students, graduate students, and research faculty.— Choice Reviews
At a time when some prominent scholars are questioning the continuing efficacy of America’s constitutional foundations, Darren Patrick Guerra makes a powerful case for America’s written Constitution and its accompanying amending process. He argues that they help secure a system of ordered liberty embodied in a fundamental law that is grounded in popular sovereignty while protecting natural rights. He carefully explains how the amending process was designed to be an explicit, authentic, and exclusive means of amendment; how it promotes wisdom and justice through enhancing deliberation and prudence; and how the process complements federalism and separation of powers. Guerra thoughtfully challenges arguments by leading constitutional theorists that the process is too difficult, too undemocratic, or too formalistic. He traces many current criticisms to the misplaced Progressive faith in the perfectibility of man and the inevitability of progress and argues for the importance of recognizing the differences among constitution interpretations, constitutional constructions, and constitutional amendments. A must read both for those who continue to believe in, defend, and praise the existing process and for those who think it should be ignored, replaced, or supplemented by less deliberative measures.— John R. Vile, Dean of University Honors College, Middle Tennessee State University
In this well researched and carefully argued book, Darren Patrick Guerra makes a compelling case for why the amendment process spelled out in Article V is the explicit, authentic, and exclusive means of amending the Constitution because it is the only process consistent with the Framers’ commitments to separation of powers and federalism. He mounts a vigorous and successful attack on those progressives who argue that Article V is 'a' but not 'the' means of amending the Constitution and contend that informal adaptations through Supreme Court interpretations, unchallenged congressional initiatives, and unchecked presidential actions are as legitimate and controlling as formal constitutional amendments. Until Guerra’s book, these progressive arguments have gone largely uncontested, but no longer. The battle over Article V has now been joined.— Ralph A. Rossum, Claremont McKenna College
It is easy to take Article V for granted. Most Americans know that it establishes a two-stage process involving Congress and the states that makes it difficult to amend the Constitution, but few among the public and the scholarly community appreciate the vital importance of Article V to American constitutional democracy. In this fine work of historical and political scholarship Professor Guerra shows how central Article V was to the design of the Constitution and he ably defends it against the growing number of scholars who view it as an indefensible restraint on majority rule. In the process Guerra offers a powerful critique of the increasingly influential arguments that the Constitution may be legitimately amended through court decisions or congressional acts.— Joseph M. Bessette, Alice Tweed Tuohy Professor of Government and Ethics Emeritus, Claremont McKenna College
Guerra’s book . . . clearly takes the topic to the next level of scholarship in several ways. His research into how new state constitutions dealt with the amendment process is extraordinary, as is the specific chronology of amendment coverage at the 1787 Constitutional Convention. He effectively meshes the views of the Constitution’s framers throughout the text to justify his positions.— Law and Politics Book Review