Tennessee Law Review, Volume 62, Number 3, Spring 1995; A Second Amendment Symposium Issue

Presumed First Edition, First printing thus. Wraps. [6], 443-821, [1] pages. Footnotes. Graphs. Cover has some wear and soiling. Letter to purchasers laid in encouraging dissemination of information on "respectable scholarship that is foursquare behind the right to keep and bear arms." Tennessee Law Review began in 1922 and is published by the Tennessee Law Review Association which is based within the University of Tennessee College of Law, Knoxville. The journal is published quarterly and edited is by University of Tennessee Law students. The Tennessee Law Review devotes most of its Spring issue to a collection of articles by members of this school, including one that says its authors have created “the Standard Model” for interpreting the Second Amendment. To this mood of self-congratulation can be added the fact that a majority of Americans tell pollsters that they believe the Second Amendment protects private ownership of guns. So the defenders of that position feel they hold both the scholarly high ground and the popular consensus. The five who constitute a kind of inner circle of Standard Modelers—Robert J. Cottrol, Stephen P. Halbrook, Don B. Kates, Joyce Lee Malcolm, and Robert E. Shalhope—amplify each other’s arguments energetically. Three of the five write in the Tennessee Law Review issue, one of them (Malcolm) devoting her essay to the fourth (Cottrol), while the fifth (Shalhope) is frequently cited. Condition: Good.

Keywords: Gun Ownership, Right to Bear Arms, Second Amendment, Randy Barnett, Glenn Harlan Reynolds, Public Health, Stephen Halbrook, Charles Dunlap, Clayton Clayton Cramer, David Kopel, Dan Gifford, Joyce Lee Malcolm, Jurisprudence, Concealed Handgun Permit

[Book #77992]

Price: $100.00

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