Description
Book SynopsisThe Fourth Amendment forbids ‘unreasonable searches and seizures’ and is the source of most constitutional constraints on policing. In this book, Michael J.Z. Mannheimer calls for a reimagination of what modern policing could look like based on the original understandings of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments.
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: The Upside-Down Fourth Amendment
- PART I: THE FOURTH AMENDMENT: ORIGINAL UNDERSTANDINGS
- Chapter 1: Two Models of the Fourth Amendment
- Chapter 2: The Local-Control Model of the Fourth Amendment
- Chapter 3: The Anti-Federalists and the Fourth Amendment
- Chapter 4: Original Understandings and Fourth Amendment Search Doctrine
- Chapter 5: The Contingent Common Law of Searches and Arrests
- PART II: THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT: ORIGINAL UNDERSTANDINGS
- Chapter 6: The Historical Backdrop of the Fourteenth Amendment
- Chapter 7: Does the Fourteenth Amendment Incorporate the Fourth?
- Chapter 8: Applying Constitutional Search-and-Seizure Constraints to the States Through the Fourteenth Amendment
- PART III: ORIGINAL UNDERSTANDINGS AND MODERN POLICING
- Chapter 9: The Principles of Nondiscrimination, Legality, and Nondelegation.
- Chapter 10: Rethinking Constitutional Constraints on Searches and Seizures
- Chapter 11: Original Understandings and Four Problems of Modern Policing
- Bibliography