How Rights Went Wrong, Jamal Greene
How Rights Went Wrong, Jamal Greene
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How Rights Went Wrong
Why Our Obsession with Rights Is Tearing America Apart

Author: Jamal Greene

Narrator: Ryan Vincent Anderson

Unabridged: 11 hr 7 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Mariner Books

Published: 03/16/2021


Synopsis

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PUBLISHERS PROSE AWARD FINALIST | “Essential and fresh and vital . . . It is the argument of this important book that until Americans can reimagine rights, there is no path forward, and there is, especially, no way to get race right. No peace, no justice.”—from the foreword by Jill Lepore, New York Times best-selling author of These Truths: A History of the United States An eminent constitutional scholar reveals how our approach to rights is dividing America, and shows how we can build a better system of justice. You have the right to remain silent—and the right to free speech. The right to worship, and to doubt. The right to be free from discrimination, and to hate. The right to life, and the right to own a gun.
Rights are a sacred part of American identity. Yet they also are the source of some of our greatest divisions. We believe that holding a right means getting a judge to let us do whatever the right protects. And judges, for their part, seem unable to imagine two rights coexisting—reducing the law to winners and losers. The resulting system of legal absolutism distorts our law, debases our politics, and exacerbates our differences rather than helping to bridge them.
As renowned legal scholar Jamal Greene argues, we need a different approach—and in How Rights Went Wrong, he proposes one that the Founders would have approved. They preferred to leave rights to legislatures and juries, not judges, he explains. Only because of the Founders’ original sin of racial discrimination—and subsequent missteps by the Supreme Court—did courts gain such outsized power over Americans’ rights. In this paradigm-shifting account, Greene forces readers to rethink the relationship between constitutional law and political dysfunction and shows how we can recover America’s original vision of rights, while updating them to confront the challenges of the twenty-first century.
Audiobook read by Ryan Vincent Anderson.

About Jamal Greene

JAMAL GREENE is Dwight Professor of Law at Columbia Law School. A graduate of Harvard College and Yale Law School and a former law clerk to Hon. John Paul Stevens, he was a reporter for Sports Illustrated from 1999–2002. He lives in New York City.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jeff

Interesting Yet Ultimately Self-Serving Take On Rights. This book presents as an interesting and novel (at least in an American sense) take on rights - namely, that they are not absolute and should be mediated by government actions. Greene claims that this would ultimately result in less polarizatio......more

Goodreads review by Debbie

This is one of the most important nonfiction books I've read in a long time. Greene isn't just teaching me details of something I already know the shape of, he's up-ending how I think about the rights and the U.S. courts; the book is really turning my brain around, and I find myself thinking about i......more

Goodreads review by Samuel

I enjoyed the novelty of Greene's argument (novel to me at least) which distinguishes between the way America's judicial system reasons about rights in the modern age, how it reasoned about rights for most of its history, and how most other countries reason about rights as well. He presents a compel......more

Goodreads review by Andrew

Great analysis of the state of rights in the US. Currently, the Court recognizes very few rights, very strongly. Greene argues that we should shift our approach to be better in-line with the vast majority of constitutional democracies—the Court should recognize many rights, but it should recognize t......more