Difference between revisions of "United States Constitution" - New World Encyclopedia

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|document_name        = United States Constitution
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|image                = Constitution Pg1of4 AC.jpg
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|image_width          = 220px
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|image_caption        = Page one of the original copy of the Constitution
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|date_created        = [[September 17]], [[1787]]
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|date_ratified        = [[June 21]], [[1788]]
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|location_of_document = [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]]
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|writer              = Delegates of the [[Philadelphia Convention]]
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|signers              = 39 of the 55 Philadelpha Convention delegates
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|purpose              = National [[constitution]] to replace the [[Articles of Confederation]]
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}}
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{{Infobox US Constitution}}
  
[[Category:Politics]]
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The '''United States Constitution''' is the supreme [[law]] of the [[United States|United States of America]]. It was adopted in its original form on September 17, 1787 by the [[United States Constitutional Convention|Constitutional Convention]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania, and later ratified by the people in conventions in each state in the name of "We the People."<ref>http://www.constitution.org/cons/constitu.htm</ref><ref>http://www.loc.gov/rr/program/bib/ourdocs/Constitution.html</ref> 
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The Constitution has a central place in American law and political culture.<ref> Casey (1974)</ref> The U.S. Constitution is the oldest written national constitution except possibly for San Marino's Statutes of 1600, whose status as a true constitution is disputed by scholars. An engrossed copy of the document is on display at the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]  
  
{{ChartersOfFreedom}}
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==History==
The '''Constitution of the United States''' is the supreme [[law]] of the [[United States|United States of America]]. It was completed on [[September 17]], [[1787]], with its adoption by the [[United States Constitutional Convention| Constitutional Convention]] in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]], [[Pennsylvania]], and was later [[ratification|ratified]] by special conventions in each of the original thirteen [[U.S. state|states]]. It created a federal union of independent states, and a federal [[government]] to operate that union.  It replaced the less defined union that had existed under the [[Articles of Confederation]]. It took effect in [[1789]] and has served as a model for the [[constitution|constitutions]] of numerous other [[nation|nations]].
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===Drafting and ratification requirements===
[[Image:Constitution.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Page I of the Constitution of the [[United States of America]]]]
 
[[Image:Constitution2.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Page II of the United States Constitution]]
 
[[Image:Constitution3.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Page III of the United States Constitution]]
 
[[Image:Constitution4.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Page IV of the United States Constitution]]
 
 
 
== History ==
 
 
{{main|History of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|History of the United States Constitution}}
  
After the [[American Revolutionary War|Revolutionary War]], the [[thirteen colonies|thirteen states]] first formed a very weak central government&mdash;with the [[Continental Congress|Congress]] being its only component&mdash;under the [[Articles of Confederation]]. Congress lacked any power to impose [[tax]]es, and, because there was no national [[executive (government)|executive]] or [[judiciary]], relied on state authorities (who were often uncooperative) to enforce all of its acts. It also had no authority to override [[Taxation in the United States|tax]] laws and [[tariff]]s between states. The Articles required unanimous consent from all the states before they could be amended and states took the central government so lightly that their representatives were often absent. For lack of a [[quorum]], Congress was frequently blocked from making even moderate changes.
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On September 1786, commissioners from five states met in the Annapolis Convention to discuss adjustments to the [[Articles of Confederation]] that would improve commerce. They invited state representatives to convene in Philadelphia to discuss improvements to the federal government. After debate, the Confederation Congress endorsed the plan to revise the Articles of Confederation on February 21, 1787. Twelve states, [[Rhode Island]] being the only exception, accepted this invitation and sent delegates to convene in May 1787. The resolution calling the Convention specified its purpose was to propose amendments to the Articles, but the Convention decided to propose a rewritten Constitution. The Philadelphia Convention voted to keep deliberations secret and decided to draft a new fundamental government design which eventually stipulated that only 9 of the 13 states would have to ratify for the new government to go into effect (for the participating states).
  
In September [[1786]], commissioners from five states met in the [[Annapolis Convention (1786)|Annapolis Convention]] to discuss adjustments to the Articles of Confederation that would improve commerce. They invited state representatives to convene in [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania|Philadelphia]] to discuss improvements to the federal government. After debate, the Confederation Congress endorsed the plan to revise the Articles of Confederation on [[February 21]], [[1787]]. Twelve states ([[Rhode Island]] being the only exception) accepted this invitation and sent delegates to convene in May [[1787]]. The resolution calling the Convention specified its purpose was to propose amendments to the Articles, but the Convention decided to propose a rewritten Constitution. It voted to keep deliberations secret and decided to draft a new fundamental government design which eventually stipulated that only 9 of the 13 states would have to ratify for the new government to go into effect. These actions were criticized by some as exceeding the convention's mandate and existing law. However, Congress, noting dissatisfaction with the Articles of Confederation government, unanimously agreed to submit the proposal to the states despite what some perceived as the exceeded terms of reference. On [[September 17]], [[1787]], the Constitution was completed in Philadelphia, and the new government it prescribed came into existence on [[March 4]], [[1789]], after fierce fights over [[ratification]] in many of the states.
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===Work of the Philadelphia Convention===
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[[Image:Scene Constitution.jpg|190px|right|thumb|The [[Philadelphia Convention]]]]
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The Virginia Plan was the unofficial agenda for the Convention, it was drafted chiefly by [[James Madison]]. It was weighted toward the interests of the larger states and proposed among other points:
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*A powerful [[bicameral]] legislature with House and Senate
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*An executive (president) chosen by the legislature
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*A judiciary, with life-terms of service and vague powers
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*The national legislature would be able to veto state laws
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An alternative proposal, the New Jersey Plan, gave states equal weights and was supported by the smaller states.  
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[[Roger Sherman]] of Connecticut brokered [[The Great Compromise]] whereby the House would represent population, the Senate would represent states, and a powerful president would be elected by elite electors. Slavery was not explicitly mentioned but 3/5 of the number of slaves would be counted toward the population used to apportion the House, and runaway slaves would have to be returned.
  
The original transcribed copy of the Constitution is on permanent display at the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]] in [[Washington, D.C.]]
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===Ratification===
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{| class="infobox" border="1" cellpadding="4" style="border-collapse:collapse; margin: 0 0 1em 1em;" align=right
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|-
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!colspan=5 align=center style="background:#ccccff" | Ratification of the Constitution
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|-
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! bgcolor="#efefef" rowspan="2" |&nbsp;
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! bgcolor="#efefef" rowspan="2" | Date
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! bgcolor="#efefef" rowspan="2" | State
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! bgcolor="#efefef" colspan="2" | Votes
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|-
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! Yes
 +
! No
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|-
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|align="right"|1
 +
||[[December 7]], [[1787]]
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||[[Delaware]]
 +
|align="right"|30
 +
|align="right"|0
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|2
 +
||[[December 12]], [[1787]]
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||[[Pennsylvania]]
 +
|align="right"|46
 +
|align="right"|23
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|3
 +
||[[December 18]], [[1787]]
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||[[New Jersey]]
 +
|align="right"|38
 +
|align="right"|0
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|4
 +
||[[January 2]], [[1788]]
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||[[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]]
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|align="right"|26
 +
|align="right"|0
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|5
 +
||[[January 9]], [[1788]]
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||[[Connecticut]]
 +
|align="right"|128
 +
|align="right"|40
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|6
 +
||[[February 6]], [[1788]]
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||[[Massachusetts]]
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|align="right"|187
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|align="right"|168
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|-
 +
|align="right"|7
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||[[April 28]], [[1788]]
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||[[Maryland]]
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|align="right"|63
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|align="right"|11
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|-
 +
|align="right"|8
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||[[May 23]], [[1788]]
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||[[South Carolina]]
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|align="right"|149
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|align="right"|73
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|-
 +
|align="right"|9
 +
||[[June 21]], [[1788]]
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||[[New Hampshire]]
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|align="right"|57
 +
|align="right"|47
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|10
 +
||[[June 25]], [[1788]]
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||[[Virginia]]
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|align="right"|89
 +
|align="right"|79
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|11
 +
||[[July 26]], [[1788]]
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||[[New York]]
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|align="right"|30
 +
|align="right"|27
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|-
 +
|align="right"|12
 +
||[[November 21]], [[1789]]
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||[[North Carolina]]
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|align="right"|194
 +
|align="right"|77
 +
|-
 +
|align="right"|13
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||[[May 29]], [[1790]]
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||[[Rhode Island]]
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|align="right"|34
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|align="right"|32
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|}
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Contrary to the process for "alteration" spelled out in Article 13 of the [[Articles of Confederation]], Congress submitted the proposal to the states and set the terms for representation.
  
''For a list of those who signed the Constitution, see [[List of signatories of the United States Constitution]].''
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On September 17, 1787, the Constitution was completed in Philadelphia at the Federal Convention, followed by a speech given by [[Benjamin Franklin]] who urged unanimity, although they decided they only needed nine states to ratify the constitution for it to go into effect. The Convention submitted the Constitution to the Congress of the Confederation, where it received approval according to Article 13 of the Articles of Confederation, but the resolution of the Congress submitting the Constitution to the states for ratification and agreeing with its provision for implementation upon ratification by nine states is contrary to Article 13, though eventually all thirteen states did ratify the Constitution, albeit after it took effect.
  
== The Constitution ==
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After fierce fights over ratification in many of the states, [[New Hampshire]] became that ninth state on June 21, 1788. Once the Congress of the Confederation received word of New Hampshire's ratification, it set a timetable for the start of operations under the Constitution, and, on March 4, 1789, the government under the Constitution began operations.
  
The U.S. Constitution styles itself the "supreme law of the land." Courts have interpreted this phrase to mean that when laws (including state constitutions) that have been passed by [[state legislature]]s, or by the (national) [[Congress of the United States|U.S. Congress]], are found to conflict with the federal constitution, these laws are [[ultra vires]] and have no effect. Decisions by the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]] over the course of two centuries have repeatedly confirmed and strengthened the doctrine of Constitutional supremacy, or the [[supremacy clause]].
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===Historical influences===
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Several of the ideas in the Constitution were new, and a large number of ideas were drawn from the literature of [[Republicanism in the United States]], from the experiences of the 13 states, and from the British experience with mixed government. The most important influence from the European continent was from [[Charles de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu|Montesquieu]], who emphasized the need to have balanced forces pushing against each other to prevent tyranny. (This in itself reflects the influence of [[Polybius]]' second century B.C.E. treatise on the checks and balances of the constitution of the Roman Republic.) [[John Locke]] is known to have been a major influence, and the [[due process]] clause of the United States Constitution was partly based on [[common law]] stretching back to the [[Magna Carta]] of 1215.
  
[[Image:Syng inkstand.jpg|right|thumb|225px|The [[Syng inkstand]], with which the Constitution was signed]]
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===Influences on the Bill of Rights===
The Constitution guarantees the legitimacy of the American state by invoking the American electorate. The people exercise authority through state actors both [[election|elected]] and appointed; some of these positions are provided for in the Constitution. State actors can change the fundamental law, if they wish, by amending the Constitution or, in the extreme, by drafting a new one.
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The [[United States Bill of Rights]] were the ten amendments added to the Constitution in 1791, as the supporters had promised opponents during the debates of 1788. The English Bill of Rights (1689) was an inspiration for the American Bill of Rights. For example, both require jury trials, contain a right to bear arms, and prohibit excessive bail as well as "cruel and unusual punishments".  Many liberties protected by state constitutions and the Virginia Declaration of Rights were incorporated into the United States Bill of Rights.
  
Different kinds of public officials have varying levels of limitations on their power. Elected officials can only continue in office if they are reelected at periodic intervals; appointed officials serve, in general, at the pleasure of the person or authority that appointed them, and may be removed at any time. The exception to this practice is the lifetime appointment by the [[President of the United States|President]] of Justices of the Supreme Court and other federal judges; the justification for this exception is that once appointed for life, these judges are presumed capable of acting free of political obligations or influence.
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== Articles of the Constitution ==
 
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{{Wikisource|Constitution of the United States of America|Constitution of the United States of America}}
== Principles of government ==
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{{Politics of the United States}}
 
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The Constitution consists of a preamble, seven original articles, twenty-seven amendments, and a paragraph certifying its enactment by the constitutional convention.
Although the Constitution has been amended several times since it was first [[adopted]], its basic principles remain the same now as in 1789.
 
 
 
There are three branches of the national government—[[executive]], [[legislative]], and [[judicial]]—and they are separate and distinct from one another. The powers given to each are in theory balanced and checked by the powers of the other two. Each branch ideally serves as a [[checks and balances|check]] on potential excesses of the others. This is known as "[[separation of powers]]", and was partly taken from the ideas of the [[Baron de Montesquieu]].
 
 
 
[[Image:Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States.png|250px|thumb|left|''[[Scene at the Signing of the Constitution of the United States]]'', by [[Howard Chandler Christy]].]]
 
The United States is [[federalism|federal]] in nature. Powers enumerated in the Constitution are given to the Federal Government, and all other, unenumerated, powers remain with the states or the people. (See the [[Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Tenth Amendment]].)
 
 
 
The Constitution, together with [[laws]] passed according to its provisions and treaties entered into by the president and approved by the [[Senate]], stands above all other laws, executive acts, and regulations. Beginning with the case of ''[[Marbury v. Madison]]'', the United States judiciary has engaged in [[judicial review]]. This means that the federal courts will examine duly enacted laws, and, if they are found to be [[unconstitutional]], will overturn them. They also examine the acts of public officials—up to and including those of the president. (See ''[[United States v. Nixon]].'')
 
 
 
Since the enactment of the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]], all persons have been [[Equal Protection Clause|equally entitled to the law's protection]]. All states are equal and in principle none can officially receive special treatment from the federal government. Within the limits of the Constitution, each state must recognize and respect the laws of the others. State governments, like the federal government, must be [[republicanism|republican]] in form, with final legitimacy resting with the people.
 
 
 
By means defined in the Fifth Article of the Constitution, Congress may propose amendments to the Constitution. Moreover, any two thirds of the states may themselves initiate a convention for proposing amendments. When ratified as specified, all amendments are considered part of the Constitution.
 
  
== Preamble ==
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===Preamble===
 
{{main|Preamble to the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Preamble to the United States Constitution}}
  
The Preamble reads:
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The Preamble states:
:''We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence<!--sic. see discussion at [[Preamble to the United States Constitution]] —>, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.''
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{{cquote|We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence<!--This is the original spelling of defense as written in the Constitution; DO NOT CHANGE—>, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the [[United States of America]].}}
  
The Preamble neither grants any powers nor inhibits any actions; it only explains the rationale behind the Constitution. The preamble, especially the first three words ("We the people"), is one of the most quoted and referenced sections of the Constitution.
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The following interpretation makes arguments that deprecate the preamble. The statement "establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence" are assertive statements.
  
== Articles of the Constitution ==
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The Preamble neither grants any powers nor inhibits any actions; it only explains the rationale behind the Constitution. The preamble is a basic statement of purpose that precedes the constitution. The Preamble, especially the first three words ("We the people"), is one of the most quoted and referenced sections of the Constitution. Indeed, they are the three most important words in the Constitution as they denote the Constitution did not come from a king or an emperor, but from ''the people'' themselves.
  
The remainder of the constitution consists of seven articles.
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The language "We, the People of the United States", is of singular importance in that it provides that the power and authority of the federal government of the United States of America does not come from the several states, or even the people of the several states, but from an entity identified as the People of the United States of America, with the Constitution serving as a compact or contract between the People of the United State of America, the several States, and a newly created entity: the federal government of United States of America. The importance of this language lies in that it places the federal government of the United States of America as not derivative of its power solely from the several States. This would become a greater issue of contention during the [[Nullification Crisis]] (testing the ability of a sovereign state to nullify a federal law based upon the premise that the federal government drew its power from the several states and thus a sovereign state was free to ignore a federal law inconsistent with its own) and during the [[American Civil War|Civil War]] (testing the ability of a sovereign state, through its people, to secede from the Union or withdraw from the compact). This, of course, made more sense when the federal government of the United States was still one of limited enumerated powers as the Founders intended (sovereign in the enumerated areas and powerless in the others), and when both the People and the several States were represented in federal legislature (the People in the House of Representatives and the several States in the Senate before the 17th Amendment, when the state legislatures still elected a state's Senators). This language thus represented the Founders' desire for outside 'checks and balances' or divided sovereignty (the People of the United States vs. the Federal Government of the United State of America vs. the Several States) as well as inside 'checks and balances' or divided sovereignty (the legislature vs. the executive vs. the judiciary).
  
===Legislative power===
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===Article One: Legislative power===
 
{{main|Article One of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article One of the United States Constitution}}
<table><tr><td valign=center>
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'''Article One''' establishes the [[legislature|legislative branch]] of government, [[Congress of the United States|U.S. Congress]], which includes the [[United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] and the [[United States Senate|Senate]]. The legislative branch makes the laws. The Article establishes the manner of election and qualifications of members of each House. In addition, it provides for free debate in congress and limits self-serving behavior of congressmen, outlines legislative procedure and indicates the powers of the legislative branch. There is a debate as to whether the powers listed in Article 1 Section 8 are a list of enumerated powers. These powers may also be interpreted as a list of powers formerly either executive or judicial in nature, that have been explicitly granted to the [[U.S. Congress]]. This interpretation may be further supported by a broad definition of both the commerce clause, and the necessary and proper clause of the Constitution. The argument for enumerated powers can be traced back to 1819 [[McCulloch v. Maryland]] [[United States Supreme Court]] ruling. Finally, it establishes limits on federal and state legislative power.
[[Image:Uscongress.gif|100px]]
 
</td><td>
 
'''Article One''' establishes the [[legislature|legislative branch]] of government, [[Congress of the United States|U.S. Congress]], which includes the [[United States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] and the [[United States Senate|Senate]]. The Article establishes the manner of election and qualifications of members of each House. In addition, it outlines legislative procedure and indicates the powers of the legislative branch. Finally, it establishes limits on federal and state legislative power.
 
</td></tr></table>
 
  
===Executive power===
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===Article Two: Executive power===
 
{{main|Article Two of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article Two of the United States Constitution}}
<table><tr><td valign=center>
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'''Article Two''' describes the [[President of the United States|presidency]] (the executive branch): procedures for the selection of the president, qualifications for office, the oath to be affirmed and the powers and duties of the office. It also provides for the office of Vice President of the United States, and specifies that the Vice President succeeds to the presidency if the President is incapacitated, dies, or resigns, although whether this succession was on an acting or permanent basis was left unclear. In practice, this has always been treated as succession, and the [[Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|25th Amendment]] provides explicitly for succession. Article Two also provides for the [[impeachment]] and removal from office of civil officers (the President, Vice President, judges, and others).
[[Image:USPresidentialSeal.jpg|100px]]
 
</td><td>
 
'''Article Two''' describes the [[United States President|presidency]] (the [[executive branch]]): procedures for the selection of the president, qualifications for office, the oath to be affirmed, the powers and duties of the office, and procedures for selection. It also provides for the office of [[Vice President of the United States]], and specifies that the Vice President succeeds to the presidency if the President is incapacitated or resigns. The article nominally makes the Vice President the presiding officer of the Senate, but in practice the Vice President only serves as such under limited circumstances. Article Two also provides for the [[impeachment]] and removal from office of civil officers (the President, Vice President, judges, and others). (See [[presidential system]]).
 
</td></tr></table>
 
  
===Judicial power===
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===Article Three: Judicial power===
 
{{main|Article Three of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article Three of the United States Constitution}}
<table><tr><td valign=center>
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'''Article Three''' describes the [[United States Federal judiciary|court system]] (the judicial branch), including the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]]. The article requires that there be one court called the Supreme Court; Congress, at its discretion, can create lower courts, whose judgments and orders are reviewable by the Supreme Court. Article Three also requires [[trial by jury]] in all criminal cases, defines the crime of [[treason]], and charges Congress with providing for a punishment for it.
[[Image:Seal of the United States Supreme Court.png|100px]]
 
</td><td>
 
'''Article Three''' describes the [[United States Federal judiciary|court system]] (the [[judicial branch]]), including the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]]. The article ''requires'' that there be one court called the Supreme Court; Congress, at its discretion, can create lower courts, whose judgments and orders are reviewable by the Supreme Court. Article Three also requires [[trial by jury]] in all criminal cases, defines the crime of [[treason]], and charges Congress with providing for a punishment for it, while imposing limits on that punishment.
 
</td></tr></table>
 
  
===States' powers and limits===
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===Article Four: States' powers and limits===
 
{{main|Article Four of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article Four of the United States Constitution}}
'''Article Four''' describes the relationship between the states and the Federal government, and amongst the states. For instance, it requires states to give "full faith and credit" to the public acts, records and court proceedings of the other states. Congress is permitted to [[regulate]] the manner in which proof of such acts, records or proceedings may be admitted. The "privileges and immunities" clause prohibits from discriminating against those from other states in favor of their own citizens (e.g., having tougher penalties for out-of-staters convicted of crimes within a state). It also establishes [[extradition]] between the states, as well as laying down a legal basis for freedom of movement and travel amongst the states. Today, this provision is sometimes taken for granted, especially by citizens who live near state borders; but in the days of the [[Articles of Confederation]], crossing state lines was often a much more arduous (and costly) process.
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'''Article Four''' describes the relationship between the states and the Federal government, and amongst the states. For instance, it requires states to give "[[Full Faith and Credit Clause|full faith and credit]]" to the public acts, records and court proceedings of the other states. Congress is permitted to [[regulate]] the manner in which proof of such acts, records or proceedings may be admitted. The [[Privileges and Immunities Clause|"privileges and immunities" clause]] prohibits state governments from discriminating against citizens of other states in favor of resident citizens (e.g., having tougher penalties for residents of Ohio convicted of crimes within Michigan). It also establishes [[extradition]] between the states, as well as laying down a legal basis for freedom of movement and travel amongst the states. Today, this provision is sometimes taken for granted, especially by citizens who live near state borders; but in the days of the [[Articles of Confederation]], crossing state lines was often a much more arduous (and costly) process. Article Four also provides for the creation and admission of new states. The [[Territorial Clause]] gives Congress the power to make rules for disposing of Federal property and governing non-state territories of the United States. Finally, the fourth section of Article Four requires the United States to guarantee to each state a [[Republic|republican form of government]], and to protect the states from invasion and violence.
  
===Process of amendment===
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===Article Five: Process of Amendments===
 
{{main|Article Five of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article Five of the United States Constitution}}
'''Article Five''' describes the process necessary to amend the Constitution. It establishes two methods of proposing amendments: by Congress or by a [[Convention to propose amendment to U.S. Constitution|national convention]] requested by the states. Under the first method, Congress can propose an amendment by a two-thirds vote (of a quorum, not necessarily of the entire body) of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. Under the second method, Congress must call a national convention for the purpose of considering amendments when two-thirds of the [[state legislature]]s "apply" to Congress for such a convention. Thus far, only the first method (proposal by Congress) has been used.
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'''Article Five''' describes the process necessary to amend the Constitution. It establishes two methods of proposing amendments: by Congress or by a [[Convention to propose amendment to U.S. Constitution|national convention]] requested by the states. Under the first method, Congress can propose an amendment by a two-thirds vote (of a [[quorum]], not necessarily of the entire body) of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. Under the second method, two-thirds (2/3) of the [[State legislature (United States)|state legislature]]s may convene and "apply" to Congress to hold a national convention, whereupon Congress must call such a convention for the purpose of considering amendments. [[As of 2007]], only the first method (proposal by Congress) has been used.
  
Once proposed&mdash;whether submitted by a national convention or by Congress&mdash;amendments must then be ratified by three-fourths of the states to take effect. Article Five gives Congress the option of requiring ratification by state legislatures or by special [[Conventions within the states to ratify an amendment to U.S. Constitution|conventions]] assembled in the states. The convention method of ratification has been used only once (to approve the [[Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution|21st Amendment]]). Article Five currently places only one limitation on the amending power&mdash;that no amendment can deprive a state of its equal representation in the Senate without that state's consent.
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Once proposed&mdash;whether submitted by Congress or by a national convention&mdash;amendments must then be ratified by three-fourths (3/4) of the states to take effect. Article Five gives Congress the option of requiring ratification by state legislatures or by special [[Conventions within the states to ratify an amendment to U.S. Constitution|conventions]] assembled in the states. The convention method of ratification has been used only once (to approve the [[Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution|21st Amendment]]). Article Five currently places only one limitation on the amending power&mdash;that no amendment can deprive a state of its equal representation in the Senate without that state's consent.
  
===Federal power===
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===Article Six: Federal power===
 
{{main|Article Six of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article Six of the United States Constitution}}
'''Article Six''' establishes the Constitution, and the laws and treaties of the United States made in accordance with it, to be the [[supremacy clause|supreme law]] of the land. It also validates national [[debt]] created under the Articles of Confederation and requires that all legislators, federal officers, and judges take [[oath]]s to support the Constitution.
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'''Article Six''' establishes the Constitution, and the laws and treaties of the United States made in accordance with it, to be the [[supremacy clause|supreme law]] of the land, and that "the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, any thing in the laws or constitutions of any state notwithstanding." It also validates national [[debt]] created under the Articles of Confederation and requires that all legislators, federal officers, and judges take [[oath]]s or affirmations to "support" the Constitution. This means that the states' constitutions and laws should not conflict with the laws of the federal constitution—and that in case of a conflict, state judges are legally bound to honor the federal laws and constitution over those of any state.
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Article Six also states that "no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States".
  
===Ratification===
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===Article Seven: Ratification===
 
{{main|Article Seven of the United States Constitution}}
 
{{main|Article Seven of the United States Constitution}}
'''Article Seven''' sets forth the requirements for ratification of the Constitution. The Constitution was originally proposed as an amendment of the Articles of Confederation, which required ratification by all 13 of the original states for amendments to take effect. Article Seven of the Constitution, however, only required ratification by 9 states for that document to take effect. Scholars have traditionally resolved this contradiction by arguing that when the ninth state ratified the Constitution and the document took effect, those 9 states implicitly seceded from the union governed by the Articles and created a new, separate federal union. Under this theory, those states that did not ratify the Constitution would have remained part of a separate country. However, eventually all the states did ratify the Constitution.
 
  
{{United States Constitution ratification vote}}
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'''Article Seven''' sets forth the requirements for [[ratification]] of the Constitution. The Constitution would not take effect until at least nine states had ratified the Constitution in state conventions specially convened for that purpose. (''See above [[#History|Drafting and ratification requirements]].'')
  
== Provisions for amendment ==
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==Provisions for amendment ==
 
The authors of the Constitution were clearly aware that changes would be necessary from time to time if the Constitution was to endure and cope with the effects of the anticipated growth of the nation. However, they were also conscious that such change should not be easy, lest it permit ill-conceived and hastily passed [[Constitutional amendment|amendments]]. Balancing this, they also wanted to ensure that an overly rigid requirement of unanimity would not block action desired by the vast majority of the population. Their solution was to devise a dual process by which the Constitution could be altered.
 
The authors of the Constitution were clearly aware that changes would be necessary from time to time if the Constitution was to endure and cope with the effects of the anticipated growth of the nation. However, they were also conscious that such change should not be easy, lest it permit ill-conceived and hastily passed [[Constitutional amendment|amendments]]. Balancing this, they also wanted to ensure that an overly rigid requirement of unanimity would not block action desired by the vast majority of the population. Their solution was to devise a dual process by which the Constitution could be altered.
 
The first option must begin in Congress which, by a two-thirds vote (of a quorum) in each house, may initiate an amendment. Alternatively, the legislatures of two-thirds of the several states may ask Congress to call a [[Convention to propose amendment to U.S. Constitution|national convention]] to discuss and draft amendments. To date, all amendments have been proposed by Congress; although state legislatures have on occasion requested the calling of a convention, no such request has yet received the concurrence required for such a convention.
 
 
In either case, amendments must have the approval of the legislatures or of smaller [[Conventions within the states to ratify an amendment to U.S. Constitution|ratifying conventions]] within three-fourths of the states before becoming part of the Constitution. All amendments save one have been submitted to the state legislatures for ratification; only the [[Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution|21st Amendment]] was ratified by individual conventions in the states.
 
  
 
[[Constitutional amendment#Form of changes to the text|Unlike most constitutions]], amendments to the U.S. constitution are appended to the existing body of the text, rather than being revisions of or insertions into the main articles. There is no provision for expunging from the text obsolete or rescinded provisions.
 
[[Constitutional amendment#Form of changes to the text|Unlike most constitutions]], amendments to the U.S. constitution are appended to the existing body of the text, rather than being revisions of or insertions into the main articles. There is no provision for expunging from the text obsolete or rescinded provisions.
  
Some people feel that [[demographics|demographic]] changes in the U.S.&mdash;specifically the great disparity in population between states&mdash;have made the Constitution too difficult to amend, with states representing as little as 4% of the population theoretically able to block an amendment desired by over 90% of Americans; others feel that it is unlikely that such an extreme result would occur. However, any proposals to change this would necessarily involve amending the Constitution itself, creating something of a [[Catch 22 (logic)|Catch-22]].
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Some people feel that [[demographics|demographic]] changes in the U.S.&mdash;specifically the great disparity in population between states&mdash;have made the Constitution too difficult to amend, with states representing as little as 4% of the population theoretically able to block an amendment desired by over 90% of Americans; others feel that it is unlikely that such an extreme result would occur. However, any proposals to change this would necessarily involve amending the Constitution itself, something of a [[Catch 22 (logic)|Catch-22]].
  
Aside from the direct process of amending the Constitution, the practical effect of its provisions may be altered by judicial decision. The United States is a [[common law]] country, and courts are obliged to follow the [[precedent|precedents]] established in prior cases. However, when a Supreme Court decision clarifies the application of a part of the Constitution to existing law, the effect is to establish the meaning of that part for all practical purposes. Not long after adoption of the Constitution, in the 1803 case of ''[[Marbury v. Madison]],'' the Supreme Court established the doctrine of [[judicial review]], which is the power of the Court to examine legislation and other acts of Congress and to decide their [[constitutionality]]. The doctrine also embraces the power of the Court to explain the meaning of various sections of the Constitution as they apply to particular cases brought before the Court. Since such cases will reflect changing legal, political, economic, and social conditions, this provides a mechanism, in practice, for adjusting the Constitution without needing to amend its text. Over the years, a series of Court decisions, on issues ranging from governmental regulation of [[radio]] and [[television]] to the rights of the accused in criminal cases, has effected a change in the way many Constitutional clauses are interpreted, without amendment to the actual text of the Constitution.
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Aside from the direct process of amending the Constitution, the practical effect of its provisions may be altered by judicial decision. The United States is a [[common law]] country, and courts follow the [[precedent]]s established in prior cases. However, when a Supreme Court decision clarifies the application of a part of the Constitution to existing law, the effect is to establish the meaning of that part for all practical purposes. Not long after adoption of the Constitution, in the 1803 case of ''[[Marbury v. Madison]],'' the Supreme Court established the doctrine of [[judicial review]], which is the power of the Court to examine legislation and other acts of Congress and to decide their [[constitutionality]]. The doctrine also embraces the power of the Court to explain the meaning of various sections of the Constitution as they apply to particular cases brought before the Court. Since such cases will reflect changing legal, political, economic, and social conditions, this provides a mechanism, in practice, for adjusting the Constitution without needing to amend its text. Over the years, a series of Court decisions, on issues ranging from governmental regulation of [[radio]] and [[television]] to the rights of the accused in criminal cases, has effected a change in the way many Constitutional clauses are interpreted, without amendment to the actual text of the Constitution.
  
 
Congressional legislation, passed to implement provisions of the Constitution or to adapt those implementations to changing conditions, also broadens and, in subtle ways, changes the meanings given to the words of the Constitution. Up to a point, the rules and regulations of the many agencies of the federal government have a similar effect. In case of objection, the test in both cases is whether, in the opinion of the courts, such legislation and rules conform with the meanings given to the words of the Constitution.
 
Congressional legislation, passed to implement provisions of the Constitution or to adapt those implementations to changing conditions, also broadens and, in subtle ways, changes the meanings given to the words of the Constitution. Up to a point, the rules and regulations of the many agencies of the federal government have a similar effect. In case of objection, the test in both cases is whether, in the opinion of the courts, such legislation and rules conform with the meanings given to the words of the Constitution.
  
 
==Amendments==
 
==Amendments==
The Constitution has a total of 27 amendments. However, since the first ten of the amendments, collectively known as the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]], were ratified simultaneously, it has in effect only been amended 17 times.
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{{main|List of amendments to the United States Constitution}}
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The Constitution has a total of 27 amendments. The first ten, collectively known as the [[United States Bill of Rights|Bill of Rights]], were ratified simultaneously. The following seventeen were ratified separately.
  
=== The Bill of Rights (1&ndash;10) ===
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=== The Bill of Rights (1–10) ===
[[Image:United States Bill of Rights.jpg|300px|thumb|United States Bill of Rights]]
 
 
{{Main|United States Bill of Rights}}
 
{{Main|United States Bill of Rights}}
The Bill of Rights comprises the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Those amendments were all adopted within a few years of the ratification of the Constitution, and all relate to limiting the power of the federal government. They were added in response to criticisms of the Constitution by the state ratification conventions and by prominent individuals such as [[Thomas Jefferson]] (who was not a delegate to the Constitutional Convention). These critics argued that without further restraints, the strong central government would become tyrannical. The amendments were proposed by Congress as part of a block of twelve in September [[1789]]. By December [[1791]] a sufficient number of states had ratified ten of the twelve proposals, and the Bill of Rights became part of the Constitution.
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{{Wikisource|United States Bill of Rights|United States Bill of Rights}}
 
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[[Image:Bill_of_Rights_Pg1of1_AC.jpg|200px|thumb|United States Bill of Rights currently housed in the [[National Archives and Records Administration|National Archives]]]]
It is commonly understood that the Bill of Rights was not originally intended to apply to the states, though except where amendments refer specifically to the Federal Government or a branch thereof (as in the [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|first amendment]], under which some states in the early years of the nation officially established a religion), there is no such delineation in the text itself. Nevertheless, a general interpretation of inapplicability to the states remained until [[1868]], when the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]] was passed, which stated, in part, that:
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The Bill of Rights comprises the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Those amendments were adopted between 1789 and 1791, and all relate to limiting the power of the federal government. They were added in response to criticisms of the Constitution by the state ratification conventions and by prominent individuals such as [[Thomas Jefferson]] (who was not a delegate to the Constitutional Convention). These critics argued that without further restraints, the strong central government would become tyrannical. The amendments were proposed by Congress as part of a block of twelve in September 1789. By December 1791 a sufficient number of states had ratified ten of the twelve proposals, and the Bill of Rights became part of the Constitution.
  
:''No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.''
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It is commonly understood that the Bill of Rights was not originally intended to apply to the states, though except where amendments refer specifically to the Federal Government or a branch thereof (as in the [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|first amendment]], under which some states in the early years of the nation officially established a religion), there is no such delineation in the text itself. Nevertheless, a general interpretation of inapplicability to the states remained until 1868, when the [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]] was passed, which stated, in part, that:
  
The Supreme Court has interpreted this clause to extend some, but not all, parts of the Bill of Rights to the states. Nevertheless, the balance of state and federal power has remained a battle in the Supreme Court; for example, a recent case dealt with whether a state could be sued by an employee under the federal [[Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990]] (see [[Federalist Society]] and [[Federalism]]).
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{{cquote|No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.}}
  
The amendments that became the Bill of Rights were actually the last ten of the twelve amendments proposed in 1789. The second of the twelve proposed amendments, regarding the compensation of members of Congress, remained unratified until [[1992]], when the legislatures of enough states finally approved it and, as a result, it became the [[Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-seventh Amendment]] despite more than two centuries of pendency. The [[Congressional Apportionment Amendment|first of the twelve]]&mdash;still technically pending before the state legislatures for ratification&mdash;pertains to the apportionment of the [[United States House of Representatives]] after each decennial [[census]]. The most recent state whose lawmakers are known to have ratified this proposal is [[Kentucky]] in [[1792]] during that commonwealth's first month of statehood.
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The Supreme Court has interpreted this clause to extend most, but not all, parts of the Bill of Rights to the states. Nevertheless, the balance of state and federal power has remained a battle in the Supreme Court.
  
The [[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|first amendment]] addresses the rights of [[freedom of speech]] and the [[freedom of the press|press]]; the right of peaceful assembly; and the [[right of petition]]. It also addresses [[freedom of religion]], both in terms of prohibiting the [[establishment of religion]] and protecting the right to [[Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment|free exercise of religion]].
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The amendments that became the Bill of Rights were actually the last ten of the twelve amendments proposed in 1789. The second of the twelve proposed amendments, regarding the compensation of members of Congress, remained unratified until 1992, when the legislatures of enough states finally approved it and, as a result, it became the [[Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-seventh Amendment]] despite more than two centuries of pendency. The [[Congressional Apportionment Amendment|first of the twelve]]&mdash;still technically pending before the state legislatures for ratification&mdash;pertains to the apportionment of the [[United States House of Representatives]] after each decennial [[census]]. The most recent state whose lawmakers are known to have ratified this proposal is [[Kentucky]] in 1792 during that commonwealth's first month of statehood.
  
The [[Second Amendment to the United States Constitution|second]] states, in its entirety, "A well regulated Militia being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms shall not be infringed." Current case law (including [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]] decisions) tends to assert that the "right of the people to keep and bear Arms" is an ''individual right'' but not an ''absolute right'', and that the states and federal government may omit certain classes of people from the general-public sense of the "militia" for cause (criminal record, young or old age, mental incapacity, etc.), and may limit the types of weapons to which the right applies. The courts have interpreted and reinterpreted the second amendment since it was ratified; the Supreme Court first visiting it in ''[[United States v. Cruikshank]],'' in [[1875]].
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*[[First Amendment to the United States Constitution|First Amendment]]: addresses the rights of [[freedom of religion]] (prohibiting the Congress [[establishment of religion]] over another religion through Law and protecting the right to [[Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment|free exercise of religion]]), [[freedom of speech]], [[freedom of the press]], the [[freedom of assembly]], and [[freedom of petition]].
  
The [[Third Amendment to the United States Constitution|third]] prohibits the government from using private homes as quarters for soldiers without the consent of the owners. The [[Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution|fourth]] guards against unreasonable searches, arrests, and seizures of [[property]].
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*[[Second Amendment to the United States Constitution|Second Amendment]]: declares "a well regulated militia" as "necessary to the security of a free State", and as explanation for prohibiting infringement of "the right of the people to keep and bear arms."
  
The next four amendments deal with the system of [[justice]]. The [[Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|fifth]] forbids [[trial]] for a major [[crime]] except after [[indictment]] by a [[grand jury]]; prohibits [[double jeopardy|repeated trials]] for the same offense after an acquittal (except in certain very limited circumstances); forbids punishment without [[due process]] of law; and provides that an accused person may not be compelled to testify against himself. The [[Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution|sixth]] guarantees a speedy public trial for criminal offenses. It requires trial by a [[jury]] (of peers), guarantees the right to [[legal counsel]] for the accused, and guarantees that the accused may require [[witness]]es to attend the trial and testify in the presence of the accused. The [[Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|seventh]] assures trial by jury in [[civil law|civil cases]] involving anything valued at more than 20 [[U.S. dollar|U.S. dollars]]. The [[Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution|eighth]] forbids excessive [[bail]] or [[fines]], and [[cruel and unusual punishment]].
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*[[Third Amendment to the United States Constitution|Third Amendment]]: prohibits the government from using private homes as quarters for soldiers without the consent of the owners. The only existing case law regarding this amendment is a lower court decision in the case of [[Engblom v. Carey]]. [http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/data/constitution/amendment03/]
  
The last two of the first ten amendments contain very broad statements of constitutional authority. The [[Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution|ninth]] declares that the listing of individual rights is not meant to be comprehensive; that the people have other rights not specifically mentioned in the Constitution. The [[Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|tenth]] provides that powers the Constitution does not delegate to the United States and does not prohibit the states from having are "reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
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*[[Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourth Amendment]]: guards against searches, arrests, and seizures of [[property]] without a specific warrant or a "probable cause" to believe a crime has been committed. Some rights to privacy have been inferred from this amendment and others by the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]].
  
===Subsequent amendments (11&ndash;27)===
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*[[Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fifth Amendment]]: forbids [[trial (law)|trial]] for a major [[crime]] except after [[indictment]] by a [[grand jury]]; prohibits [[double jeopardy]] (repeated trials), except in certain very limited circumstances; forbids punishment without [[due process]] of law; and provides that an accused person may not be compelled to testify against himself (this is also known as "[[Taking the fifth]]" or "Pleading the fifth"). This is regarded as the "rights of the accused" amendment. It also prohibits government from taking private property without "[[just compensation]]," the basis of [[eminent domain]] in the United States.
Amendments to the Constitution subsequent to the Bill of Rights cover many subjects. The majority of the seventeen later amendments stem from continued efforts to expand individual civil or political liberties, while a few are concerned with modifying the basic governmental structure drafted in Philadelphia in 1787.
 
  
There also have been many failed attempts to amend the Constitution. There are some that are still ongoing today (''See [[Proposals for amendments to the United States Constitution]]'').
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*[[Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Sixth Amendment]]: guarantees a speedy public trial for criminal offenses. It requires trial by a [[jury]] (of peers), guarantees the right to [[legal counsel]] for the accused, and guarantees that the accused may require [[witness]]es to attend the trial and testify in the presence of the accused. It also guarantees the accused a right to know the charges against him. The Sixth Amendment has several court cases associated with it, including ''[[Powell v. Alabama]]'', ''[[United States v. Wong Kim Ark]]'', ''[[Gideon v. Wainwright]]'', and ''[[Crawford v. Washington]]''. In 1966, the Supreme Court ruled that the fifth amendment prohibition on forced self incrimination and the sixth amendment clause on right to counsel were to be made known to all persons placed under arrest, and these clauses have become known as the [[Miranda rights]].
  
* [[Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Eleventh Amendment]] ([[1795]]): Clarifies judicial power over foreign nationals, and limits ability of citizens to sue states in federal courts and under federal law. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XI|Full text]])
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*[[Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Seventh Amendment]]: assures trial by jury in [[Civil law (common law)|civil cases]] involving anything valued at more than 20 [[United States dollar]]s at the time, which is currently worth $300, when accounting for [[inflation]].
* [[Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twelfth Amendment]] ([[1804]]): Changes the method of presidential elections so that members of the electoral college cast separate ballots for president and vice president. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XII|Full text]])
 
* [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Thirteenth Amendment]] ([[1865]]): Abolishes slavery and grants Congress power to enforce abolition. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XIII|Full text]])
 
* [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]] ([[1868]]): Defines United States citizenship; prohibits ''states'' from abridging citizens' [[Privileges or Immunities Clause|privileges or immunities]] and right to [[due process]] and the [[equal protection|equal protection of the law]]; repeals the [[three-fifths compromise]]. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XIV|Full text]])
 
* [[Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fifteenth Amendment]] ([[1870]]): Prohibits the federal government and the states from using a citizen's race, color, or previous status as a slave as a qualification for voting. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XV|Full text]])
 
* [[Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Sixteenth Amendment]] ([[1913]]): Authorizes unapportioned federal taxes on income. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XVI|Full text]])
 
* [[Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Seventeenth Amendment]] ([[1913]]): Establishes direct election of senators. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XVII|Full text]])
 
* [[Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Eighteenth Amendment]] ([[1919]]): Prohibited the manufacturing, importing, and exporting of beverage alcohol. Repealed by the Twenty-First Amendment. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XVIII|Full text]])
 
* [[Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Nineteenth Amendment]] ([[1920]]): Prohibits the federal government and the states from using a citizen's sex as a qualification for voting. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XIX|Full text]])
 
* [[Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twentieth Amendment]] ([[1933]]): Changes details of Congressional and presidential terms and of [[United States presidential line of succession|presidential succession]]. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XX|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-first Amendment]] ([[1933]]): Repeals Eighteenth Amendment but permits states to retain prohibition and ban the importation of alcohol. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXI|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-second Amendment]] ([[1951]]): Limits president to two terms. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXII|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-third Amendment]] ([[1961]]): Grants presidential electors to the [[District of Columbia]]. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXIII|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-fourth Amendment]] ([[1964]]): Prohibits the federal government and the states from requiring the payment of a tax as a qualification for voting for federal officials. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXIV|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-fifth Amendment]] ([[1967]]): Changes details of presidential succession, provides for temporary removal of president, and provides for replacement of the vice president. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXV|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-sixth Amendment]] ([[1971]]): Prohibits the federal government and the states from using an age greater than 18 as a qualification to vote. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXVI|Full text]])
 
* [[Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-seventh Amendment]] ([[1992]]): Limits congressional pay raises. ([[wikisource:Constitution_of_the_United_States_of_America#Amendment_XXVII|Full text]])
 
  
=== Unratified Amendments ===
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*[[Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Eighth Amendment]]: forbids excessive [[bail]] or [[fines]], and [[cruel and unusual punishment]].  
Over 10,000 Constitutional amendments have been introduced in Congress since 1789; in a typical Congressional year in the last several decades, between 100 and 200 are offered. Most of these concepts never get out of Congressional committee, much less get proposed by the Congress for ratification. Backers of some amendments <!-- (how many?) —> have attempted the alternative, and thus far never-utilized, method mentioned in Article Five. In two instances&mdash;reapportionment in the [[1960s]] and a balanced federal budget during the [[1970s]] and [[1980s]]&mdash;these attempts have come within just two state legislative "applications" of triggering that alternative method.
 
  
The Eighteenth Amendment is the only amendment to be directly and specifically repealed by another (the Twenty-first). The episode highlighted the importance of proposing and ratifying only the most important, and least evanescent, of amendments.
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*[[Ninth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Ninth Amendment]]: declares that the listing of individual rights in the Constitution and Bill of Rights is not meant to be comprehensive; and that the other rights not specifically mentioned are retained elsewhere by the people.
  
Of the thirty-three amendments that have been proposed by Congress, six have failed ratification by the required three-quarters of the state legislatures&mdash;and four of those six are still technically pending before state lawmakers. Starting with the 18th amendment, each proposed amendment (except for the 19th Amendment and for the still-pending Child Labor Amendment of 1924) has specified a deadline for passage. The following are the unratified amendments:
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*[[Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Tenth Amendment]]: provides that powers that the Constitution does not delegate to the United States and does not prohibit the states from exercising, are "reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."
  
*The [[Congressional Apportionment Amendment]] proposed by the [[First United States Congress|1st Congress]] on [[September 25]], [[1789]], defined a formula for how many members there would be in the [[United States House of Representatives]] after each decennial [[census]]. Ratified by eleven states, the last being [[Kentucky]] in [[June]] [[1792]] (Kentucky's initial month of statehood), this amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. In principle it may yet be ratified, though as written it became moot when the population of the United States reached ten million.
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===Subsequent amendments (11–27)===
*The so-called [[the missing thirteenth amendment|missing thirteenth amendment]], or "Titles of Nobility Amendment" (TONA), proposed by the [[11th Congress]] on [[May 1]], [[1810]], would have ended the citizenship of any American accepting "any Title of Nobility or Honour" from any foreign power. Some scholars maintain that the amendment ''was'' actually ratified by the legislatures of enough states, and that a conspiracy has suppressed it. Known to have been ratified by lawmakers in twelve states, the last in [[1812]], this amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. It may yet be ratified.
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{{Wikisource|Additional amendments to the United States Constitution|Additional amendments to the United States Constitution}}
*A pro-slavery proposal, known as the [[Corwin amendment]], proposed by the [[Thirty-sixth United States Congress|36th Congress]] on [[March 2]], [[1861]], which would purportedly have prevented the passage of any future constitutional amendment allowing Congress to regulate "the domestic institutions" within any state. It was ratified by only [[Ohio]] and [[Maryland]] lawmakers before the outbreak of the [[American Civil War|Civil War]]. [[Illinois]] lawmakers&mdash;sitting as a state constitutional convention at the time&mdash;likewise approved it, but that action is of questionable validity. The proposed amendment contains no expiration date for ratification and may yet be ratified. However, adoption of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments after the Civil War likely means that the amendment would be ineffective if adopted.
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Amendments to the Constitution subsequent to the Bill of Rights cover many subjects. The majority of the seventeen later amendments stem from continued efforts to expand individual civil or political liberties, while a few are concerned with modifying the basic governmental structure drafted in Philadelphia in 1787. Although the United States Constitution has been amended a total of 17 times, only 16 of the amendments are currently used because the 21st amendment supersedes the 18th.
*A [[child labor amendment]] proposed by the [[Sixty-eighth United States Congress|68th Congress]] on [[June 2]], [[1924]], which stipulates: "The Congress shall have power to limit, regulate, and prohibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age." This amendment is now moot, since subsequent federal [[child labor laws]] have uniformly been upheld as a valid exercise of Congress' powers under the [[commerce clause]]. This amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. It may yet be ratified.
 
  
=== Expired Amendments ===
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* [[Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Eleventh Amendment]] (1795): Clarifies judicial power over foreign nationals, and limits ability of citizens to sue states in federal courts and under federal law. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XI|Full text]])
Properly placed in a separate category from the other four constitutional amendments that Congress proposed to the states, but which not enough states have approved, are the following two offerings which&mdash;due to deadlines&mdash;are no longer subject to ratification.
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* [[Twelfth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twelfth Amendment]] (1804): Changes the method of presidential elections so that members of the [[electoral college]] cast separate ballots for president and vice president. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XII|Full text]])
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* [[Thirteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Thirteenth Amendment]] (1865): Abolishes slavery and grants Congress power to enforce abolition. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XIII|Full text]])
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* [[Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fourteenth Amendment]] (1868): Defines United States citizenship; prohibits ''states'' from abridging citizens' [[Privileges or Immunities Clause|privileges or immunities]] and rights to [[due process]] and the [[equal protection|equal protection of the law]]; repeals the [[Three-fifths compromise]]; prohibits repudiation of the federal debt. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XIV|Full text]])
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* [[Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Fifteenth Amendment]] (1870): Prohibits the federal government and the states from using a citizen's race, color, or previous status as a slave as a qualification for voting. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XV|Full text]])
 +
* [[Sixteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Sixteenth Amendment]] (1913): Authorizes unapportioned federal taxes on income. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XVI|Full text]])
 +
* [[Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Seventeenth Amendment]] (1913): Establishes direct election of senators. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XVII|Full text]])
 +
* [[Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Eighteenth Amendment]] (1919): Prohibited the manufacturing, importing, and exporting of alcoholic beverages. (see [[prohibition]]) ''Repealed by the Twenty-First Amendment.'' ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XVIII|Full text]])
 +
* [[Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Nineteenth Amendment]] (1920): Gives women the ability to vote. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XIX|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twentieth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twentieth Amendment]] (1933): Changes details of Congressional and presidential terms and of [[United States presidential line of succession|presidential succession]]. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XX|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-first Amendment]] (1933): Repeals Eighteenth Amendment. Permits states to prohibit the importation of alcoholic beverages. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXI|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-second Amendment]] (1951): Limits president to two terms. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXII|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-third Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-third Amendment]] (1961): Grants presidential electors to the [[Washington, D.C.|District of Columbia]]. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXIII|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-fourth Amendment]] (1964): Prohibits the federal government and the states from requiring the payment of a tax as a qualification for voting for federal officials. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXIV|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-fifth Amendment]] (1967): Changes details of presidential succession, provides for temporary removal of president, and provides for replacement of the vice president. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXV|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-sixth Amendment]] (1971): Prohibits the federal government and the states from forbidding any citizen of age 18 or greater to vote simply because of their age. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXVI|Full text]])
 +
* [[Twenty-seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution|Twenty-seventh Amendment]] (1992): Limits congressional pay raises. ([[wikisource:Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XXVII|Full text]])
  
*The [[Equal Rights Amendment]], or ERA, which reads in pertinent part "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." Proposed by the [[Ninety-second United States Congress|92nd Congress]] on [[March 22]], [[1972]], it was ratified by the legislatures of 35 states, and expired on either [[March 22]], [[1979]], or on [[June 30]], [[1982]], depending upon one's point of view of a controversial ratification deadline three-year extension by the [[Ninety-fifth United States Congress|95th Congress]] in [[1978]]. Of the 35 states ratifying it, four later rescinded their ratifications prior to the extended ratification period which commenced [[March 23]], [[1979]] and a fifth&mdash;while not going so far as to actually rescind its earlier ratification&mdash;adopted a resolution stipulating that its approval would not extend beyond March 22, 1979. There continues to be diversity of opinion as to whether such reversals are valid; no court has ruled on the question, including the Supreme Court. But a precedent against the validity of rescission was first established during the ratification process of the 14th Amendment when Ohio and [[New Jersey]] rescinded their earlier approvals, but yet were counted as ratifying states when the 14th Amendment was ultimately proclaimed part of the Constitution in 1868.
+
===Unratified amendments===
*The [[District of Columbia Voting Rights Amendment]] was proposed by the 95th Congress on [[August 22]], [[1978]]. Had it been ratified, it would have granted to [[Washington, D.C.]], two Senators and at least one member of the House of Representatives as though the District of Columbia were a state. Ratified by the legislatures of only 16 states&mdash;less than half of the required 38&mdash;the proposed amendment expired on [[August 22]], [[1985]].
+
{{see also|Proposals for amendments to the United States Constitution|List of unsuccessful attempts to amend the U.S. Constitution}}
  
{{seealso|List of unsuccessful attempts to amend the U.S. Constitution}}
+
Over 10,000 Constitutional amendments have been introduced in Congress since 1789; in a typical Congressional year in the last several decades, between 100 and 200 are offered. Most of these concepts never get out of Congressional committee, much less get proposed by the Congress for ratification. Backers of some amendments <!-- (how many?) —> have attempted the alternative, and thus-far never-utilized, method mentioned in Article Five. In two instances&mdash;reapportionment in the 1960s and a balanced federal budget during the 1970s and 1980s&mdash;these attempts have come within just two state legislative "applications" of triggering that alternative method.
  
=== Proposals for amendments ===
+
Of the thirty-three amendments that have been proposed by Congress, six have failed ratification by the required three-quarters of the state legislatures&mdash;and four of those six are still technically pending before state lawmakers (see ''[[Coleman v. Miller]]''). Starting with the 18th amendment, each proposed amendment (except for the 19th Amendment and for the still-pending Child Labor Amendment of 1924) has specified a deadline for passage. The following are the unratified amendments:
There are currently only a few proposals for amendments which have entered mainstream political debate. These include the proposed [[Federal Marriage Amendment]], the [[Balanced Budget Amendment]], and the [[flag-burning amendment|Flag-Burning Amendment]].
 
  
==International influences on the development of the Constitution==
+
*The [[Congressional Apportionment Amendment]] proposed by the [[First United States Congress|1st Congress]] on [[September 25]], [[1789]], defined a formula for how many members there would be in the [[United States House of Representatives]] after each decennial [[census]]. Ratified by eleven states, the last being [[Kentucky]] in June 1792 (Kentucky's initial month of statehood), this amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. In principle it may yet be ratified, though as written it became moot when the population of the United States reached ten million.
[[Image:Detail_of_Magna_Carta_monument.JPG|thumb|270px|In [[1957]] the [[American Bar Association]] acknowledged the debt American law and constitutionalism had to [[Magna Carta]] by erecting a monument at [[Runnymede]], [[England]].]]
+
*The so-called [[the missing thirteenth amendment|missing thirteenth amendment]], or "Titles of Nobility Amendment" (TONA), proposed by the [[11th Congress]] on [[May 1]], [[1810]], would have ended the citizenship of any American accepting "any Title of Nobility or Honour" from any foreign power. Some maintain that the amendment ''was'' actually ratified by the legislatures of enough states, and that a conspiracy has suppressed it, but this has been thoroughly debunked. [http://www.thirdamendment.com/missing.html] Known to have been ratified by lawmakers in twelve states, the last in 1812, this amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. It may yet be ratified.
Some of the ideas embodied in the Constitution were new, but many were drawn from [[Classical Antiquity]] and the British governmental tradition of [[mixed government]] which was in practice among 12 of the 13 states and were advocated by the writings of [[Charles de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu]]. The United States Constitution was partly based on ideas from the [[Constitution_of_the_United_Kingdom|uncodified constitution of the United Kingdom]], such as Article 39 from the [[Magna Carta]] of [[1215]] which states that:
+
*The [[Corwin amendment]], proposed by the [[Thirty-sixth United States Congress|36th Congress]] on [[March 2]], [[1861]], would have forbidden any attempt to subsequently amend the Constitution to empower the Federal government to "abolish or interfere" with the "domestic institutions" of the states (a delicate way of referring to [[slavery]]). It was ratified by only [[Ohio]] and [[Maryland]] lawmakers before the outbreak of the [[American Civil War|Civil War]]. [[Illinois]] lawmakers&mdash;sitting as a state constitutional convention at the time&mdash;likewise approved it, but that action is of questionable validity. The proposed amendment contains no expiration date for ratification and may yet be ratified. However, adoption of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments after the Civil War likely means that the amendment would be ineffective if adopted.
 +
*A [[child labor amendment]] proposed by the [[Sixty-eighth United States Congress|68th Congress]] on [[June 2]], [[1924]], which stipulates: "The Congress shall have power to limit, regulate, and prohibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age." This amendment is now moot, since subsequent federal [[child labor laws]] have uniformly been upheld as a valid exercise of Congress' powers under the [[commerce clause]]. This amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. It may yet be ratified.
  
:''No free man shall be arrested, or imprisoned, or deprived of his property, or outlawed, or exiled, or in any way destroyed, nor shall we go against him or send against him, unless by legal judgement of his peers, or by the law of the land.''
+
Properly placed in a separate category from the other four constitutional amendments that Congress proposed to the states, but which not enough states have approved, are the following two offerings which&mdash;because of deadlines&mdash;are no longer subject to ratification.
  
The English [[Bill of Rights 1689|Bill of Rights (1689)]] also acted as a source of ideas for the United States Constitution. For example, like the English Bill of Rights, the U.S. Constitution requires jury trials, contains a right to bear arms, and prohibits excessive bail and of "cruel and unusual punishments."
+
*The [[Equal Rights Amendment]], or ERA, which reads in pertinent part "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." Proposed by the [[Ninety-second United States Congress|92nd Congress]] on [[March 22]], [[1972]], it was ratified by the legislatures of 35 states, and expired on either [[March 22]], [[1979]], or on [[June 30]], [[1982]], depending upon one's point of view of a controversial three-year extension of the ratification deadline, which was passed by the [[Ninety-fifth United States Congress|95th Congress]] in 1978. Of the 35 states ratifying it, four later rescinded their ratifications prior to the extended ratification period which commenced [[March 23]], [[1979]] and a fifth&mdash;while not going so far as to actually rescind its earlier ratification&mdash;adopted a resolution stipulating that its approval would not extend beyond [[March 22]], [[1979]]. There continues to be diversity of opinion as to whether such reversals are valid; no court has ruled on the question, including the Supreme Court. But a precedent against the validity of rescission was first established during the ratification process of the 14th Amendment when Ohio and [[New Jersey]] rescinded their earlier approvals, but yet were counted as ratifying states when the 14th Amendment was ultimately proclaimed part of the Constitution in 1868.
 
+
*The [[District of Columbia Voting Rights Amendment]] was proposed by the 95th Congress on [[August 22]], [[1978]]. Had it been ratified, it would have granted to [[Washington, D.C.]], two Senators and at least one member of the House of Representatives as though the District of Columbia were a state. Ratified by the legislatures of only 16 states&mdash;less than half of the required 38&mdash;the proposed amendment expired on [[August 22]], [[1985]].
Liberties guaranteed by Magna Carta and the [[1689]] English Bill of Rights were directly incorporated into state statutes and the [[Virginia Declaration of Rights]], and many were then further incorporated into the Constitution and the [[United States Bill of Rights]].
 
 
 
==International influences of the Constitution==
 
The Constitution of the United States has also served as a model for the constitutions of numerous other nations, including the second oldest codified constitution, the [[May Constitution of Poland]], which was written in [[1791]]. The course and ideas of the [[French Revolution]] were also heavily influenced by the United States Constitution.
 
  
== Legality of the Constitution ==
+
There are currently only a few proposals for amendments which have entered mainstream political debate. These include the proposed [[Federal Marriage Amendment]], the [[Balanced Budget Amendment]], and the [[Flag Desecration Amendment]].
One historical controversy is whether the Constitution was illegally adopted.
 
For example, historian [[Joseph Ellis]] in ''Founding Brothers'' charges that there is truth in the allegations that the:
 
# "Convention was extralegal, since its explicit mandate was to revise the Articles of Confederation, not replace them."
 
# "Machinery for ratification did not require the unanimous consent [as] dictated by the Articles [of Confederation] themselves."
 
  
Constitutional lawyer [[Michael P. Farris]] disagrees, arguing that:
+
==Original pages of the Constitution==
# "No limits were placed on the authority of the convention to make amendments," and that the Constitution is, in effect, simply an amended version of the Articles of Confederation.
+
<center><gallery>
# "Congress and all thirteen state legislatures approved the new ratification process as required by the Articles." Eleven states held ratification conventions (approved by their legislatures) and approved the Constitution by July 26, 1788, a direct approval of the change in procedure. The other two states' legislatures (of North Carolina and Rhode Island) also approved of the ratification process&mdash;North Carolina by holding a convention and Rhode Island by submitting the Constitution to a referendum, although they both rejected the Constitution (at first). Thus, the change in ''procedure'' was approved by all the states.
+
Image:Constitution Pg2of4 AC.jpg|Page 2
 +
Image:Constitution Pg3of4 AC.jpg|Page 3
 +
Image:Constitution Pg4of4 AC.jpg|Page 4
 +
Image:Constitution signatures.jpg|Signatures
 +
</gallery></center>
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
 +
{{US Historical Document}}
 
===General===  
 
===General===  
*''[[Coleman v. Miller]]'': U.S. Supreme Court ruled that an amendment remains pending for ratification unless Congress specifies otherwise.
+
*[[List of signatories of the United States Constitution]]
 +
*[[List of sources of law in the United States]]
 
*[[Congressional power of enforcement]]
 
*[[Congressional power of enforcement]]
 
*[[Constitution Day (United States)]]
 
*[[Constitution Day (United States)]]
 
*[[Constitutional interpretation]]
 
*[[Constitutional interpretation]]
 +
*[[Federalist Papers]]
 
*[[Founding Fathers of the United States]]
 
*[[Founding Fathers of the United States]]
 
*[[History of democracy]]
 
*[[History of democracy]]
 
*[[Original Intent]]
 
*[[Original Intent]]
 +
*[[National Constitution Center]]
  
 
===Related documents===
 
===Related documents===
*The 1620 [[Mayflower Compact]]
+
* [[Mayflower Compact]] (1620)
*The 1641 [[Massachusetts Body of Liberties]]
+
* [[Fundamental Orders of Connecticut]] (1639)
 +
* [[Massachusetts Body of Liberties]] (1641)
 +
* [[English Bill of Rights]] (1689)
 +
* [[Articles of Confederation]] (1777)
  
===Related Authors===
+
==Notes==
*[[Alexander Hamilton]]
+
{{Reflist}}
*[[Richard Hofstadter]]
 
*[[John Jay]]
 
*[[Terry Jordan]]
 
*[[Charles Kesler]]
 
*[[James Madison]]
 
*[[John Marshall]]
 
*[[Thomas Paine]]
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
* {{Book reference | Author=Levy, Leonard W., ed. |Title=Encyclopedia of the American Constitution (2nd Edition) |Publisher=New York: Macmillan|Year=2000 |ID=ISBN 0028648803}}
+
===Primary sources===
* {{Book reference | Author=Hall, Kermit L. | Title= A Comprehensive Bibliography of American Constitutional and Legal History, 1896-1979 | Publisher=Millwood, N. Y.: Kraus International | Year=1984 | ID=ISBN 0527374083}}
+
* Bailyn, Bernard, ed. ''The Debate on the Constitution: Federalist and Antifederalist Speeches, Articles, and Letters During the Struggle for Ratification''. Part One: September 1787 to February 1788 ([http://www.loa.org The Library of America], 1993) ISBN 0-940450-42-9
* {{Book reference | Author=Kammen, Michael | Title= A Machine that Would Go of Itself: The Constitution in American Culture | Publisher=New York: Alfred A. Knopf | Year=1986 | ID=ISBN 0394529057}}
+
* Bailyn, Bernard, ed. ''The Debate on the Constitution: Federalist and Antifederalist Speeches, Articles, and Letters During the Struggle for Ratification''. Part Two: January to August 1788 ([http://www.loa.org The Library of America], 1993) ISBN 0-940450-64-X
* {{Book reference | Author=Kelly, Alfred Hinsey; Harbison, Winfred Audif; Belz, Herman | Title=The American Constitution: its origins and development (7th edition)| Publisher=New York : Norton & Co |Year=1991 | ID=ISBN 0393961192}}
+
* Garvey, John H. ed. ''Modern Constitutional Theory: A Reader'' 5th ed 2004; 820pp.
*{{Book reference | Author=Edling, Max M.| Title=A Revolution in Favor of Government: Origins of the U.S. Constitution and the Making of the American State | Publisher=Oxford University Press | Year=2003 | ID=ISBN 0195148703}}
+
* Mason, Alpheus Thomas  and Donald Grier Stephenson, ed.  ''American Constitutional Law: Introductory Essays and Selected Cases'' (14th Edition) (2004)
*{{Book reference | Author=Fallon, Richard H. |Title=The Dynamic Constitution : An Introduction to American Constitutional Law| Publisher=Cambridge University Press |Year= 2004 |ID=ISBN 0521840945}}
+
* Tribe, Laurence H. ''American Constitutional Law'' (1999)
*{{Book reference | Author=Ellis, Joseph. |Title=Founding Brothers: The Revolutionary Generation| Publisher=Vintage |Year= 2002 |ID=ISBN 0375705244}}
+
 
*{{Journal reference | Author=Farris, Michael P. | Title=Through the Founders' Eyes: Was the Constitution Illegally Adopted? | Journal=The Home School Court Report. | Year=July/August 2005 | Volume=21 | Number=4 | Pages=6-10}}, [http://www.hslda.org/courtreport/V21N4/V21N401.asp available online], excerpt from (to be published) ''Constitutional Law for Enlightened Citizens''.
+
===Reference Books===
*{{Journal reference | Author=Mazzone, Jason. | Title=The Creation of a Constitutional Culture | Journal=Tulsa Law Review. | Year=2005 | Volume=40 | Number=4 | Pages=671}}, [http://ssrn.com/abstract=831927]
+
*  Hall, Kermit, ed.  ''The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States.'' Oxford U. Press, 1992. 1032 pp. 
 +
* Levy, Leonard W. et al., ed. ''Encyclopedia of the American Constitution.'' 5 vol; 1992; 3000 pp
 +
* [http://aboutlaw.com/dictionary/index.htm US Law Dictionary]
 +
 
 +
===Secondary sources===
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| first=Akhil Reed | last = Amar
 +
| authorlink = Akhil Amar
 +
| year = 2005
 +
| title= America's Constitution: A Biography
 +
| chapter = In the Beginning
 +
| publisher = Random House
 +
| location = [[New York City|New York]]
 +
| id = ISBN 1-4000-6262-4
 +
}}
 +
* Anastaplo, George, "Reflections on Constitutional Law" 2006 ISBN 0-8131-9156-4
 +
*Beard, Charles. [http://ideas.repec.org/b/hay/hetboo/beard1913.html ''An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States''], 1913.
 +
* Richard R. Beeman, Stephen Botein, and Edward C., Carter, II, eds., ''Beyond Confederation: Origins of the Constitution and American National Identity'' (University of North Carolina Press, 1987);
 +
* Gregory Casey. "The Supreme Court and Myth: An Empirical Investigation," ''Law & Society Review,'' Vol. 8, No. 3 (Spring, 1974), pp. 385–420 [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0023-9216(197421)8%3A3%3C385%3ATSCAMA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-R online in JSTOR]
 +
* Countryman, Edward, ed. ''What Did the Constitution Mean to Early Americans.''Bedford/St. Martin's, 1999. xii + 169 pp. [http://www.h-net.msu.edu/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=28656930163675 online review] ISBN 0-312-18262-7.
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| last = Edling | first = Max M.
 +
| title=A Revolution in Favor of Government: Origins of the U.S. Constitution and the Making of the American State
 +
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 +
| year=2003
 +
| id=ISBN 0-19-514870-3
 +
}}
 +
*  Ely, James W., Jr.  ''The Guardian of Every Other Right: A Constitutional History of Property Rights.'' Oxford U. Press, 1992. 193 pp.
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| last = Fallon | first = Richard H.
 +
| title = The Dynamic Constitution: An Introduction to American Constitutional Law
 +
| publisher = Cambridge University Press
 +
| year = 2004
 +
| id = ISBN 0-521-84094-5
 +
}}
 +
* Finkelman, Paul ''Slavery and the Founders: Race and Slavery in the Age of Jefferson'' (M.E. Sharpe, 1996);
 +
* Hoffer, Peter Charles.  ''The Law's Conscience: Equitable Constitutionalism in America'' U. of North Carolina Press, 1990. 301 pp. 
 +
*  Irons, Peter.  ''A People's History of the Supreme Court.'' 2000. 542 pp. 
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| last = Kammen | first = Michael
 +
| title= A Machine that Would Go of Itself: The Constitution in American Culture
 +
| location = New York
 +
| publisher = Alfred A. Knopf
 +
| year=1986
 +
| id=ISBN 0-394-52905-7
 +
}}
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| author=Kelly, Alfred Hinsey; Harbison, Winfred Audif; Belz, Herman
 +
| title=The American Constitution: its origins and development
 +
| edition = 7<sup>th</sup> edition
 +
| location = New York
 +
| publisher = Norton & Co
 +
| year = 1991
 +
| id = ISBN 0-393-96119-2
 +
}}
 +
* Kersch, Ken I. ''Constructing Civil Liberties: Discontinuities in the Development of American Constitutional Law.'' Cambridge U. Press, 2004. 392 pp. 
 +
* Kyvig, David E.  ''Explicit and Authentic Acts: Amending the U.S. Constitution, 1776–1995.'' U. Press of Kansas, 1996. 604 pp. 
 +
* Levin, Daniel Lessard.  ''Representing Popular Sovereignty: The Constitution in American Political Culture.'' State U. of New York Press., 1999. 283 pp. 
 +
* Licht, Robert A., ed.  ''The Framers and Fundamental Rights.'' American Enterprise Inst. Press, 1991. 194 pp. 
 +
* Marshall, Thurgood, "The Constitution: A Living Document," ''Howard Law Journal'' 1987: 623-28.
 +
* Powell, H. Jefferson.  ''A Community Built on Words: The Constitution in History and Politics.'' U. of Chicago Press, 2002. 251 pp. 
 +
* Rakove, Jack N.  ''Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution.'' Knopf, 1996. 455 pp. 
 +
* Sandoz, Ellis.  ''A Government of Laws: Political Theory, Religion, and the American Founding.'' Louisiana State U. Press, 1990. 259 pp. 
 +
* Sheldon, Charles H. ''Essentials of Constitutional Law: The Supreme Court and the Fundamental Law'' (2001) 208 pp
 +
* VanBurkleo, Sandra F.; Hall, Kermit L.; and Kaczorowski, Robert J., eds. ''Constitutionalism and American Culture: Writing the New Constitutional History.'' U. Press of Kansas, 2002. 464 pp.
 +
* {{cite journal
 +
| last = Mazzone | first = Jason
 +
| title=The Creation of a Constitutional Culture
 +
| journal=Tulsa Law Review
 +
| year=2005 | volume=40 | Number=4 | pages=671
 +
| url = http://ssrn.com/abstract=831927
 +
}}
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| author = [[Jean Edward Smith|Smith, Jean Edward]]; Levine, Herbert M.
 +
| year = 1988
 +
| title = Civil Liberties & Civil Rights Debated
 +
| location = Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
 +
| publisher = Prentice Hall
 +
}}
 +
* {{cite book
 +
| first = Jean Edward | last = Smith
 +
| authorlink = Jean Edward Smith
 +
| year = 1989
 +
| title = The Constitution and American Foreign Policy
 +
| location = St. Paul, MN
 +
| publisher = West Publishing Company
 +
}}
 +
* Black, G. Edward.  ''The Constitution and the New Deal.''Harvard U. Press, 2000. 385 pp. 
 +
* Wiecek, William M., "The Witch at the Christening: Slavery and the Constitution's Origins," Leonard W. Levy and Dennis J. Mahoney, eds., ''The Framing and Ratification of the Constitution'' (Macmillan, 1987), 178-84.
 +
 
 +
==Further reading==
 +
*{{cite book |title = President Who? Forgotten Founders|last = Klos|first = Stanley L. |work = |publisher = Evisum, Inc. |location = Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |pages = 261|year = 2004 |id= ISBN 0-9752627-5-0}}
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{wikisourcepar|Constitution of the United States of America}}
+
{{commonscat}}
 
+
{{wikiquote}}
 +
{{wikisource|Constitution of the United States of America}}
 
===National Archives===
 
===National Archives===
 
* [http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experience/charters/constitution.html The National Archives Experience &mdash; Constitution of the United States]
 
* [http://www.archives.gov/national-archives-experience/charters/constitution.html The National Archives Experience &mdash; Constitution of the United States]
Line 264: Line 426:
  
 
===Non-government web sites===
 
===Non-government web sites===
* [http://www.law.cornell.edu/topics/constitutional.html Law about...the Constitution]: An overview of constitutional law from the [[Legal Information Institute]]
+
* [http://www.law.cornell.edu/anncon/ Annotated Constitution] by the [[Congressional Research Service]] of the U.S. [[Library of Congress]](hyperlinked version published by [[LII]])
* [http://www.usconstitution.net The U.S. Constitution Online]: Full text of Constitution, with some history and annotation
 
* [http://www.usconstitution.net/constamrat.html The U.S. Constitution Online: Record of ratifications by states]
 
* [http://www.constitutioncenter.org/ National Constitution Center in Philadelphia]: Museum and education center
 
* [http://www.ericdigests.org/pre-926/constitution.htm Education on the U.S. Constitution. ERIC Digest No. 39.]: Study on the treatment of the Constitution in public education
 
  
===Activist/advocacy web sites===
 
* [http://www.smallgovtimes.com/ SmallGovTimes.com]: Site advocating small government and strict constitutional construction
 
* [http://www.thirty-thousand.org/ Thirty-Thousand.org]: Site advocating an increase in the size of the House of Representatives.
 
* [http://www.usconstitution.biz U.S. Constitution.biz]: Web site of "Free Mart Publications", offering conservative pamphlets on the Constitution
 
* [http://www.krusch.com/real/real2.html Krusch, Barry (2003). ''Would The Real First Amendment Please Stand Up?''] Online book arguing that the Supreme Court's interpretation of the First Amendment has created a “virtual First Amendment" that is radically different from the true amendment.
 
* [http://praxeology.net/LS-NT-0.htm ''No Treason'' by Lysander Spooner] 19th century essay argues that the U.S Constitution is without authority.
 
  
 
{{US Constitution}}
 
{{US Constitution}}
[[Category:United States historical documents|Constitution]]
 
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United States Constitution
Page one of the original copy of the Constitution
Page one of the original copy of the Constitution
Created September 17, 1787
Ratified June 21, 1788
Location National Archives
Authors Delegates of the Philadelphia Convention
Signers 39 of the 55 Philadelpha Convention delegates
Purpose National constitution to replace the Articles of Confederation
United States of America
Great Seal of the United States

This article is part of the series:
United States Constitution


Original text of the Constitution
Preamble

Articles of the Constitution
I ∙ II ∙ III ∙ IV ∙ V ∙ VI ∙ VII

Amendments to the Constitution
Bill of Rights
I ∙ II ∙ III ∙ IV ∙ V ∙ VI ∙ VII ∙ VIII ∙ IX ∙ X

Subsequent Amendments
XI ∙ XII ∙ XIII ∙ XIV ∙ XV ∙ XVI
XVII ∙ XVIII ∙ XIX ∙ XX ∙ XXI ∙ XXII
XXIII ∙ XXIV ∙ XXV ∙ XXVI ∙ XXVII


Other countries · Law Portal

The United States Constitution is the supreme law of the United States of America. It was adopted in its original form on September 17, 1787 by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and later ratified by the people in conventions in each state in the name of "We the People."[1][2] The Constitution has a central place in American law and political culture.[3] The U.S. Constitution is the oldest written national constitution except possibly for San Marino's Statutes of 1600, whose status as a true constitution is disputed by scholars. An engrossed copy of the document is on display at the National Archives in Washington, D.C.

History

Drafting and ratification requirements

On September 1786, commissioners from five states met in the Annapolis Convention to discuss adjustments to the Articles of Confederation that would improve commerce. They invited state representatives to convene in Philadelphia to discuss improvements to the federal government. After debate, the Confederation Congress endorsed the plan to revise the Articles of Confederation on February 21, 1787. Twelve states, Rhode Island being the only exception, accepted this invitation and sent delegates to convene in May 1787. The resolution calling the Convention specified its purpose was to propose amendments to the Articles, but the Convention decided to propose a rewritten Constitution. The Philadelphia Convention voted to keep deliberations secret and decided to draft a new fundamental government design which eventually stipulated that only 9 of the 13 states would have to ratify for the new government to go into effect (for the participating states).

Work of the Philadelphia Convention

The Virginia Plan was the unofficial agenda for the Convention, it was drafted chiefly by James Madison. It was weighted toward the interests of the larger states and proposed among other points:

  • A powerful bicameral legislature with House and Senate
  • An executive (president) chosen by the legislature
  • A judiciary, with life-terms of service and vague powers
  • The national legislature would be able to veto state laws

An alternative proposal, the New Jersey Plan, gave states equal weights and was supported by the smaller states. Roger Sherman of Connecticut brokered The Great Compromise whereby the House would represent population, the Senate would represent states, and a powerful president would be elected by elite electors. Slavery was not explicitly mentioned but 3/5 of the number of slaves would be counted toward the population used to apportion the House, and runaway slaves would have to be returned.

Ratification

Ratification of the Constitution
  Date State Votes
Yes No
1 December 7, 1787 Delaware 30 0
2 December 12, 1787 Pennsylvania 46 23
3 December 18, 1787 New Jersey 38 0
4 January 2, 1788 Georgia 26 0
5 January 9, 1788 Connecticut 128 40
6 February 6, 1788 Massachusetts 187 168
7 April 28, 1788 Maryland 63 11
8 May 23, 1788 South Carolina 149 73
9 June 21, 1788 New Hampshire 57 47
10 June 25, 1788 Virginia 89 79
11 July 26, 1788 New York 30 27
12 November 21, 1789 North Carolina 194 77
13 May 29, 1790 Rhode Island 34 32

Contrary to the process for "alteration" spelled out in Article 13 of the Articles of Confederation, Congress submitted the proposal to the states and set the terms for representation.

On September 17, 1787, the Constitution was completed in Philadelphia at the Federal Convention, followed by a speech given by Benjamin Franklin who urged unanimity, although they decided they only needed nine states to ratify the constitution for it to go into effect. The Convention submitted the Constitution to the Congress of the Confederation, where it received approval according to Article 13 of the Articles of Confederation, but the resolution of the Congress submitting the Constitution to the states for ratification and agreeing with its provision for implementation upon ratification by nine states is contrary to Article 13, though eventually all thirteen states did ratify the Constitution, albeit after it took effect.

After fierce fights over ratification in many of the states, New Hampshire became that ninth state on June 21, 1788. Once the Congress of the Confederation received word of New Hampshire's ratification, it set a timetable for the start of operations under the Constitution, and, on March 4, 1789, the government under the Constitution began operations.

Historical influences

Several of the ideas in the Constitution were new, and a large number of ideas were drawn from the literature of Republicanism in the United States, from the experiences of the 13 states, and from the British experience with mixed government. The most important influence from the European continent was from Montesquieu, who emphasized the need to have balanced forces pushing against each other to prevent tyranny. (This in itself reflects the influence of Polybius' second century B.C.E. treatise on the checks and balances of the constitution of the Roman Republic.) John Locke is known to have been a major influence, and the due process clause of the United States Constitution was partly based on common law stretching back to the Magna Carta of 1215.

Influences on the Bill of Rights

The United States Bill of Rights were the ten amendments added to the Constitution in 1791, as the supporters had promised opponents during the debates of 1788. The English Bill of Rights (1689) was an inspiration for the American Bill of Rights. For example, both require jury trials, contain a right to bear arms, and prohibit excessive bail as well as "cruel and unusual punishments". Many liberties protected by state constitutions and the Virginia Declaration of Rights were incorporated into the United States Bill of Rights.

Articles of the Constitution

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Constitution of the United States of America
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The Constitution consists of a preamble, seven original articles, twenty-seven amendments, and a paragraph certifying its enactment by the constitutional convention.

Preamble

The Preamble states:

We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.

The following interpretation makes arguments that deprecate the preamble. The statement "establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence" are assertive statements.

The Preamble neither grants any powers nor inhibits any actions; it only explains the rationale behind the Constitution. The preamble is a basic statement of purpose that precedes the constitution. The Preamble, especially the first three words ("We the people"), is one of the most quoted and referenced sections of the Constitution. Indeed, they are the three most important words in the Constitution as they denote the Constitution did not come from a king or an emperor, but from the people themselves.

The language "We, the People of the United States", is of singular importance in that it provides that the power and authority of the federal government of the United States of America does not come from the several states, or even the people of the several states, but from an entity identified as the People of the United States of America, with the Constitution serving as a compact or contract between the People of the United State of America, the several States, and a newly created entity: the federal government of United States of America. The importance of this language lies in that it places the federal government of the United States of America as not derivative of its power solely from the several States. This would become a greater issue of contention during the Nullification Crisis (testing the ability of a sovereign state to nullify a federal law based upon the premise that the federal government drew its power from the several states and thus a sovereign state was free to ignore a federal law inconsistent with its own) and during the Civil War (testing the ability of a sovereign state, through its people, to secede from the Union or withdraw from the compact). This, of course, made more sense when the federal government of the United States was still one of limited enumerated powers as the Founders intended (sovereign in the enumerated areas and powerless in the others), and when both the People and the several States were represented in federal legislature (the People in the House of Representatives and the several States in the Senate before the 17th Amendment, when the state legislatures still elected a state's Senators). This language thus represented the Founders' desire for outside 'checks and balances' or divided sovereignty (the People of the United States vs. the Federal Government of the United State of America vs. the Several States) as well as inside 'checks and balances' or divided sovereignty (the legislature vs. the executive vs. the judiciary).

Article One: Legislative power

Article One establishes the legislative branch of government, U.S. Congress, which includes the House of Representatives and the Senate. The legislative branch makes the laws. The Article establishes the manner of election and qualifications of members of each House. In addition, it provides for free debate in congress and limits self-serving behavior of congressmen, outlines legislative procedure and indicates the powers of the legislative branch. There is a debate as to whether the powers listed in Article 1 Section 8 are a list of enumerated powers. These powers may also be interpreted as a list of powers formerly either executive or judicial in nature, that have been explicitly granted to the U.S. Congress. This interpretation may be further supported by a broad definition of both the commerce clause, and the necessary and proper clause of the Constitution. The argument for enumerated powers can be traced back to 1819 McCulloch v. Maryland United States Supreme Court ruling. Finally, it establishes limits on federal and state legislative power.

Article Two: Executive power

Article Two describes the presidency (the executive branch): procedures for the selection of the president, qualifications for office, the oath to be affirmed and the powers and duties of the office. It also provides for the office of Vice President of the United States, and specifies that the Vice President succeeds to the presidency if the President is incapacitated, dies, or resigns, although whether this succession was on an acting or permanent basis was left unclear. In practice, this has always been treated as succession, and the 25th Amendment provides explicitly for succession. Article Two also provides for the impeachment and removal from office of civil officers (the President, Vice President, judges, and others).

Article Three: Judicial power

Article Three describes the court system (the judicial branch), including the Supreme Court. The article requires that there be one court called the Supreme Court; Congress, at its discretion, can create lower courts, whose judgments and orders are reviewable by the Supreme Court. Article Three also requires trial by jury in all criminal cases, defines the crime of treason, and charges Congress with providing for a punishment for it.

Article Four: States' powers and limits

Article Four describes the relationship between the states and the Federal government, and amongst the states. For instance, it requires states to give "full faith and credit" to the public acts, records and court proceedings of the other states. Congress is permitted to regulate the manner in which proof of such acts, records or proceedings may be admitted. The "privileges and immunities" clause prohibits state governments from discriminating against citizens of other states in favor of resident citizens (e.g., having tougher penalties for residents of Ohio convicted of crimes within Michigan). It also establishes extradition between the states, as well as laying down a legal basis for freedom of movement and travel amongst the states. Today, this provision is sometimes taken for granted, especially by citizens who live near state borders; but in the days of the Articles of Confederation, crossing state lines was often a much more arduous (and costly) process. Article Four also provides for the creation and admission of new states. The Territorial Clause gives Congress the power to make rules for disposing of Federal property and governing non-state territories of the United States. Finally, the fourth section of Article Four requires the United States to guarantee to each state a republican form of government, and to protect the states from invasion and violence.

Article Five: Process of Amendments

Article Five describes the process necessary to amend the Constitution. It establishes two methods of proposing amendments: by Congress or by a national convention requested by the states. Under the first method, Congress can propose an amendment by a two-thirds vote (of a quorum, not necessarily of the entire body) of the Senate and of the House of Representatives. Under the second method, two-thirds (2/3) of the state legislatures may convene and "apply" to Congress to hold a national convention, whereupon Congress must call such a convention for the purpose of considering amendments. As of 2007, only the first method (proposal by Congress) has been used.

Once proposed—whether submitted by Congress or by a national convention—amendments must then be ratified by three-fourths (3/4) of the states to take effect. Article Five gives Congress the option of requiring ratification by state legislatures or by special conventions assembled in the states. The convention method of ratification has been used only once (to approve the 21st Amendment). Article Five currently places only one limitation on the amending power—that no amendment can deprive a state of its equal representation in the Senate without that state's consent.

Article Six: Federal power

Article Six establishes the Constitution, and the laws and treaties of the United States made in accordance with it, to be the supreme law of the land, and that "the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, any thing in the laws or constitutions of any state notwithstanding." It also validates national debt created under the Articles of Confederation and requires that all legislators, federal officers, and judges take oaths or affirmations to "support" the Constitution. This means that the states' constitutions and laws should not conflict with the laws of the federal constitution—and that in case of a conflict, state judges are legally bound to honor the federal laws and constitution over those of any state.

Article Six also states that "no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States".

Article Seven: Ratification

Article Seven sets forth the requirements for ratification of the Constitution. The Constitution would not take effect until at least nine states had ratified the Constitution in state conventions specially convened for that purpose. (See above Drafting and ratification requirements.)

Provisions for amendment

The authors of the Constitution were clearly aware that changes would be necessary from time to time if the Constitution was to endure and cope with the effects of the anticipated growth of the nation. However, they were also conscious that such change should not be easy, lest it permit ill-conceived and hastily passed amendments. Balancing this, they also wanted to ensure that an overly rigid requirement of unanimity would not block action desired by the vast majority of the population. Their solution was to devise a dual process by which the Constitution could be altered.

Unlike most constitutions, amendments to the U.S. constitution are appended to the existing body of the text, rather than being revisions of or insertions into the main articles. There is no provision for expunging from the text obsolete or rescinded provisions.

Some people feel that demographic changes in the U.S.—specifically the great disparity in population between states—have made the Constitution too difficult to amend, with states representing as little as 4% of the population theoretically able to block an amendment desired by over 90% of Americans; others feel that it is unlikely that such an extreme result would occur. However, any proposals to change this would necessarily involve amending the Constitution itself, something of a Catch-22.

Aside from the direct process of amending the Constitution, the practical effect of its provisions may be altered by judicial decision. The United States is a common law country, and courts follow the precedents established in prior cases. However, when a Supreme Court decision clarifies the application of a part of the Constitution to existing law, the effect is to establish the meaning of that part for all practical purposes. Not long after adoption of the Constitution, in the 1803 case of Marbury v. Madison, the Supreme Court established the doctrine of judicial review, which is the power of the Court to examine legislation and other acts of Congress and to decide their constitutionality. The doctrine also embraces the power of the Court to explain the meaning of various sections of the Constitution as they apply to particular cases brought before the Court. Since such cases will reflect changing legal, political, economic, and social conditions, this provides a mechanism, in practice, for adjusting the Constitution without needing to amend its text. Over the years, a series of Court decisions, on issues ranging from governmental regulation of radio and television to the rights of the accused in criminal cases, has effected a change in the way many Constitutional clauses are interpreted, without amendment to the actual text of the Constitution.

Congressional legislation, passed to implement provisions of the Constitution or to adapt those implementations to changing conditions, also broadens and, in subtle ways, changes the meanings given to the words of the Constitution. Up to a point, the rules and regulations of the many agencies of the federal government have a similar effect. In case of objection, the test in both cases is whether, in the opinion of the courts, such legislation and rules conform with the meanings given to the words of the Constitution.

Amendments

The Constitution has a total of 27 amendments. The first ten, collectively known as the Bill of Rights, were ratified simultaneously. The following seventeen were ratified separately.

The Bill of Rights (1–10)

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United States Bill of Rights
United States Bill of Rights currently housed in the National Archives

The Bill of Rights comprises the first ten amendments to the Constitution. Those amendments were adopted between 1789 and 1791, and all relate to limiting the power of the federal government. They were added in response to criticisms of the Constitution by the state ratification conventions and by prominent individuals such as Thomas Jefferson (who was not a delegate to the Constitutional Convention). These critics argued that without further restraints, the strong central government would become tyrannical. The amendments were proposed by Congress as part of a block of twelve in September 1789. By December 1791 a sufficient number of states had ratified ten of the twelve proposals, and the Bill of Rights became part of the Constitution.

It is commonly understood that the Bill of Rights was not originally intended to apply to the states, though except where amendments refer specifically to the Federal Government or a branch thereof (as in the first amendment, under which some states in the early years of the nation officially established a religion), there is no such delineation in the text itself. Nevertheless, a general interpretation of inapplicability to the states remained until 1868, when the Fourteenth Amendment was passed, which stated, in part, that:

No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

The Supreme Court has interpreted this clause to extend most, but not all, parts of the Bill of Rights to the states. Nevertheless, the balance of state and federal power has remained a battle in the Supreme Court.

The amendments that became the Bill of Rights were actually the last ten of the twelve amendments proposed in 1789. The second of the twelve proposed amendments, regarding the compensation of members of Congress, remained unratified until 1992, when the legislatures of enough states finally approved it and, as a result, it became the Twenty-seventh Amendment despite more than two centuries of pendency. The first of the twelve—still technically pending before the state legislatures for ratification—pertains to the apportionment of the United States House of Representatives after each decennial census. The most recent state whose lawmakers are known to have ratified this proposal is Kentucky in 1792 during that commonwealth's first month of statehood.

  • Second Amendment: declares "a well regulated militia" as "necessary to the security of a free State", and as explanation for prohibiting infringement of "the right of the people to keep and bear arms."
  • Third Amendment: prohibits the government from using private homes as quarters for soldiers without the consent of the owners. The only existing case law regarding this amendment is a lower court decision in the case of Engblom v. Carey. [1]
  • Fourth Amendment: guards against searches, arrests, and seizures of property without a specific warrant or a "probable cause" to believe a crime has been committed. Some rights to privacy have been inferred from this amendment and others by the Supreme Court.
  • Fifth Amendment: forbids trial for a major crime except after indictment by a grand jury; prohibits double jeopardy (repeated trials), except in certain very limited circumstances; forbids punishment without due process of law; and provides that an accused person may not be compelled to testify against himself (this is also known as "Taking the fifth" or "Pleading the fifth"). This is regarded as the "rights of the accused" amendment. It also prohibits government from taking private property without "just compensation," the basis of eminent domain in the United States.
  • Sixth Amendment: guarantees a speedy public trial for criminal offenses. It requires trial by a jury (of peers), guarantees the right to legal counsel for the accused, and guarantees that the accused may require witnesses to attend the trial and testify in the presence of the accused. It also guarantees the accused a right to know the charges against him. The Sixth Amendment has several court cases associated with it, including Powell v. Alabama, United States v. Wong Kim Ark, Gideon v. Wainwright, and Crawford v. Washington. In 1966, the Supreme Court ruled that the fifth amendment prohibition on forced self incrimination and the sixth amendment clause on right to counsel were to be made known to all persons placed under arrest, and these clauses have become known as the Miranda rights.
  • Seventh Amendment: assures trial by jury in civil cases involving anything valued at more than 20 United States dollars at the time, which is currently worth $300, when accounting for inflation.
  • Eighth Amendment: forbids excessive bail or fines, and cruel and unusual punishment.
  • Ninth Amendment: declares that the listing of individual rights in the Constitution and Bill of Rights is not meant to be comprehensive; and that the other rights not specifically mentioned are retained elsewhere by the people.
  • Tenth Amendment: provides that powers that the Constitution does not delegate to the United States and does not prohibit the states from exercising, are "reserved to the States respectively, or to the people."

Subsequent amendments (11–27)

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Additional amendments to the United States Constitution

Amendments to the Constitution subsequent to the Bill of Rights cover many subjects. The majority of the seventeen later amendments stem from continued efforts to expand individual civil or political liberties, while a few are concerned with modifying the basic governmental structure drafted in Philadelphia in 1787. Although the United States Constitution has been amended a total of 17 times, only 16 of the amendments are currently used because the 21st amendment supersedes the 18th.

  • Eleventh Amendment (1795): Clarifies judicial power over foreign nationals, and limits ability of citizens to sue states in federal courts and under federal law. (Full text)
  • Twelfth Amendment (1804): Changes the method of presidential elections so that members of the electoral college cast separate ballots for president and vice president. (Full text)
  • Thirteenth Amendment (1865): Abolishes slavery and grants Congress power to enforce abolition. (Full text)
  • Fourteenth Amendment (1868): Defines United States citizenship; prohibits states from abridging citizens' privileges or immunities and rights to due process and the equal protection of the law; repeals the Three-fifths compromise; prohibits repudiation of the federal debt. (Full text)
  • Fifteenth Amendment (1870): Prohibits the federal government and the states from using a citizen's race, color, or previous status as a slave as a qualification for voting. (Full text)
  • Sixteenth Amendment (1913): Authorizes unapportioned federal taxes on income. (Full text)
  • Seventeenth Amendment (1913): Establishes direct election of senators. (Full text)
  • Eighteenth Amendment (1919): Prohibited the manufacturing, importing, and exporting of alcoholic beverages. (see prohibition) Repealed by the Twenty-First Amendment. (Full text)
  • Nineteenth Amendment (1920): Gives women the ability to vote. (Full text)
  • Twentieth Amendment (1933): Changes details of Congressional and presidential terms and of presidential succession. (Full text)
  • Twenty-first Amendment (1933): Repeals Eighteenth Amendment. Permits states to prohibit the importation of alcoholic beverages. (Full text)
  • Twenty-second Amendment (1951): Limits president to two terms. (Full text)
  • Twenty-third Amendment (1961): Grants presidential electors to the District of Columbia. (Full text)
  • Twenty-fourth Amendment (1964): Prohibits the federal government and the states from requiring the payment of a tax as a qualification for voting for federal officials. (Full text)
  • Twenty-fifth Amendment (1967): Changes details of presidential succession, provides for temporary removal of president, and provides for replacement of the vice president. (Full text)
  • Twenty-sixth Amendment (1971): Prohibits the federal government and the states from forbidding any citizen of age 18 or greater to vote simply because of their age. (Full text)
  • Twenty-seventh Amendment (1992): Limits congressional pay raises. (Full text)

Unratified amendments

Over 10,000 Constitutional amendments have been introduced in Congress since 1789; in a typical Congressional year in the last several decades, between 100 and 200 are offered. Most of these concepts never get out of Congressional committee, much less get proposed by the Congress for ratification. Backers of some amendments have attempted the alternative, and thus-far never-utilized, method mentioned in Article Five. In two instances—reapportionment in the 1960s and a balanced federal budget during the 1970s and 1980s—these attempts have come within just two state legislative "applications" of triggering that alternative method.

Of the thirty-three amendments that have been proposed by Congress, six have failed ratification by the required three-quarters of the state legislatures—and four of those six are still technically pending before state lawmakers (see Coleman v. Miller). Starting with the 18th amendment, each proposed amendment (except for the 19th Amendment and for the still-pending Child Labor Amendment of 1924) has specified a deadline for passage. The following are the unratified amendments:

  • The Congressional Apportionment Amendment proposed by the 1st Congress on September 25, 1789, defined a formula for how many members there would be in the United States House of Representatives after each decennial census. Ratified by eleven states, the last being Kentucky in June 1792 (Kentucky's initial month of statehood), this amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. In principle it may yet be ratified, though as written it became moot when the population of the United States reached ten million.
  • The so-called missing thirteenth amendment, or "Titles of Nobility Amendment" (TONA), proposed by the 11th Congress on May 1, 1810, would have ended the citizenship of any American accepting "any Title of Nobility or Honour" from any foreign power. Some maintain that the amendment was actually ratified by the legislatures of enough states, and that a conspiracy has suppressed it, but this has been thoroughly debunked. [2] Known to have been ratified by lawmakers in twelve states, the last in 1812, this amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. It may yet be ratified.
  • The Corwin amendment, proposed by the 36th Congress on March 2, 1861, would have forbidden any attempt to subsequently amend the Constitution to empower the Federal government to "abolish or interfere" with the "domestic institutions" of the states (a delicate way of referring to slavery). It was ratified by only Ohio and Maryland lawmakers before the outbreak of the Civil War. Illinois lawmakers—sitting as a state constitutional convention at the time—likewise approved it, but that action is of questionable validity. The proposed amendment contains no expiration date for ratification and may yet be ratified. However, adoption of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendments after the Civil War likely means that the amendment would be ineffective if adopted.
  • A child labor amendment proposed by the 68th Congress on June 2, 1924, which stipulates: "The Congress shall have power to limit, regulate, and prohibit the labor of persons under eighteen years of age." This amendment is now moot, since subsequent federal child labor laws have uniformly been upheld as a valid exercise of Congress' powers under the commerce clause. This amendment contains no expiration date for ratification. It may yet be ratified.

Properly placed in a separate category from the other four constitutional amendments that Congress proposed to the states, but which not enough states have approved, are the following two offerings which—because of deadlines—are no longer subject to ratification.

  • The Equal Rights Amendment, or ERA, which reads in pertinent part "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." Proposed by the 92nd Congress on March 22, 1972, it was ratified by the legislatures of 35 states, and expired on either March 22, 1979, or on June 30, 1982, depending upon one's point of view of a controversial three-year extension of the ratification deadline, which was passed by the 95th Congress in 1978. Of the 35 states ratifying it, four later rescinded their ratifications prior to the extended ratification period which commenced March 23, 1979 and a fifth—while not going so far as to actually rescind its earlier ratification—adopted a resolution stipulating that its approval would not extend beyond March 22, 1979. There continues to be diversity of opinion as to whether such reversals are valid; no court has ruled on the question, including the Supreme Court. But a precedent against the validity of rescission was first established during the ratification process of the 14th Amendment when Ohio and New Jersey rescinded their earlier approvals, but yet were counted as ratifying states when the 14th Amendment was ultimately proclaimed part of the Constitution in 1868.
  • The District of Columbia Voting Rights Amendment was proposed by the 95th Congress on August 22, 1978. Had it been ratified, it would have granted to Washington, D.C., two Senators and at least one member of the House of Representatives as though the District of Columbia were a state. Ratified by the legislatures of only 16 states—less than half of the required 38—the proposed amendment expired on August 22, 1985.

There are currently only a few proposals for amendments which have entered mainstream political debate. These include the proposed Federal Marriage Amendment, the Balanced Budget Amendment, and the Flag Desecration Amendment.

Original pages of the Constitution

See also

Founding Documents
of the United States
Declaration of Independence (1776)
Articles of Confederation (1777)
Constitution (1787)
Bill of Rights (1789)

General

  • List of signatories of the United States Constitution
  • List of sources of law in the United States
  • Congressional power of enforcement
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Related documents

Notes

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

Primary sources

  • Bailyn, Bernard, ed. The Debate on the Constitution: Federalist and Antifederalist Speeches, Articles, and Letters During the Struggle for Ratification. Part One: September 1787 to February 1788 (The Library of America, 1993) ISBN 0-940450-42-9
  • Bailyn, Bernard, ed. The Debate on the Constitution: Federalist and Antifederalist Speeches, Articles, and Letters During the Struggle for Ratification. Part Two: January to August 1788 (The Library of America, 1993) ISBN 0-940450-64-X
  • Garvey, John H. ed. Modern Constitutional Theory: A Reader 5th ed 2004; 820pp.
  • Mason, Alpheus Thomas and Donald Grier Stephenson, ed. American Constitutional Law: Introductory Essays and Selected Cases (14th Edition) (2004)
  • Tribe, Laurence H. American Constitutional Law (1999)

Reference Books

  • Hall, Kermit, ed. The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. Oxford U. Press, 1992. 1032 pp.
  • Levy, Leonard W. et al., ed. Encyclopedia of the American Constitution. 5 vol; 1992; 3000 pp
  • US Law Dictionary

Secondary sources

  • Amar, Akhil Reed (2005). "In the Beginning", America's Constitution: A Biography. New York: Random House. ISBN 1-4000-6262-4. 
  • Anastaplo, George, "Reflections on Constitutional Law" 2006 ISBN 0-8131-9156-4
  • Beard, Charles. An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States, 1913.
  • Richard R. Beeman, Stephen Botein, and Edward C., Carter, II, eds., Beyond Confederation: Origins of the Constitution and American National Identity (University of North Carolina Press, 1987);
  • Gregory Casey. "The Supreme Court and Myth: An Empirical Investigation," Law & Society Review, Vol. 8, No. 3 (Spring, 1974), pp. 385–420 online in JSTOR
  • Countryman, Edward, ed. What Did the Constitution Mean to Early Americans.Bedford/St. Martin's, 1999. xii + 169 pp. online review ISBN 0-312-18262-7.
  • Edling, Max M. (2003). A Revolution in Favor of Government: Origins of the U.S. Constitution and the Making of the American State. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-514870-3. 
  • Ely, James W., Jr. The Guardian of Every Other Right: A Constitutional History of Property Rights. Oxford U. Press, 1992. 193 pp.
  • Fallon, Richard H. (2004). The Dynamic Constitution: An Introduction to American Constitutional Law. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-84094-5. 
  • Finkelman, Paul Slavery and the Founders: Race and Slavery in the Age of Jefferson (M.E. Sharpe, 1996);
  • Hoffer, Peter Charles. The Law's Conscience: Equitable Constitutionalism in America U. of North Carolina Press, 1990. 301 pp.
  • Irons, Peter. A People's History of the Supreme Court. 2000. 542 pp.
  • Kammen, Michael (1986). A Machine that Would Go of Itself: The Constitution in American Culture. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-394-52905-7. 
  • Kelly, Alfred Hinsey; Harbison, Winfred Audif; Belz, Herman (1991). The American Constitution: its origins and development, 7th edition, New York: Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-96119-2. 
  • Kersch, Ken I. Constructing Civil Liberties: Discontinuities in the Development of American Constitutional Law. Cambridge U. Press, 2004. 392 pp.
  • Kyvig, David E. Explicit and Authentic Acts: Amending the U.S. Constitution, 1776–1995. U. Press of Kansas, 1996. 604 pp.
  • Levin, Daniel Lessard. Representing Popular Sovereignty: The Constitution in American Political Culture. State U. of New York Press., 1999. 283 pp.
  • Licht, Robert A., ed. The Framers and Fundamental Rights. American Enterprise Inst. Press, 1991. 194 pp.
  • Marshall, Thurgood, "The Constitution: A Living Document," Howard Law Journal 1987: 623-28.
  • Powell, H. Jefferson. A Community Built on Words: The Constitution in History and Politics. U. of Chicago Press, 2002. 251 pp.
  • Rakove, Jack N. Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution. Knopf, 1996. 455 pp.
  • Sandoz, Ellis. A Government of Laws: Political Theory, Religion, and the American Founding. Louisiana State U. Press, 1990. 259 pp.
  • Sheldon, Charles H. Essentials of Constitutional Law: The Supreme Court and the Fundamental Law (2001) 208 pp
  • VanBurkleo, Sandra F.; Hall, Kermit L.; and Kaczorowski, Robert J., eds. Constitutionalism and American Culture: Writing the New Constitutional History. U. Press of Kansas, 2002. 464 pp.
  • Mazzone, Jason (2005). The Creation of a Constitutional Culture. Tulsa Law Review 40: 671.
  • Smith, Jean Edward; Levine, Herbert M. (1988). Civil Liberties & Civil Rights Debated. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall. 
  • Smith, Jean Edward (1989). The Constitution and American Foreign Policy. St. Paul, MN: West Publishing Company. 
  • Black, G. Edward. The Constitution and the New Deal.Harvard U. Press, 2000. 385 pp.
  • Wiecek, William M., "The Witch at the Christening: Slavery and the Constitution's Origins," Leonard W. Levy and Dennis J. Mahoney, eds., The Framing and Ratification of the Constitution (Macmillan, 1987), 178-84.

Further reading

  • Klos, Stanley L. (2004). President Who? Forgotten Founders. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Evisum, Inc., 261. ISBN 0-9752627-5-0. 

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