103 research outputs found

    Self-Defense in Asian Religions

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    The Costs and Consequences of Gun Control

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    In politicizing mass murders, gun control advocates, such as President Obama, insist that more laws against firearms can enhance public safety. Over and over again, there are calls for common sense gun controls, such as a system of universal background checks, a ban on high-capacity magazines, and a ban on assault weapons. And yet such proposals are not likely to stop a deranged person bent on murder

    It Isn\u27t About Duck Hunting: The British Origins of The Right to Arms

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    A Review of To Keep and Bear Arms: The Origins of an Anglo-American Right by Joyce Lee Malcol

    Treating Guns Like Consumer Products

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    The Second Amendment in the Tenth Circuit: Three Decades of (Mostly) Harmless Error

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    The Second Amendment in the Nineteenth Century

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    The Torah and Self-Defense

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    The First Century of Right to Arms Litigation

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    This Article examines state court cases involving the right to arms, during the first century following ratification of the Amendment in 1791. This is not the first article to survey some of those cases. This Article includes additional cases, and details the procedural postures and facts, not only the holdings. The Article closely examines how the Supreme Court integrated the nineteenth century arms cases into Heller and McDonald to shape modern Second Amendment law. Part I briefly explains two English cases which greatly influenced American legal understandings. Semayne’s Case is the foundation of “castle doctrine” — the right to home security which includes the right of armed self-defense in the home. Sir John Knight’s Case fortified the tradition of the right to bear arms, providing that the person must bear arms in a non-terrifying manner. Part II examines American antebellum cases; these are the cases to which Heller looked for guidance on the meaning of the Second Amendment. Part III looks at cases from Reconstruction and the early years of Jim Crow, through 1891. As with the antebellum cases, the large majority of post-war cases are from the Southeast, which during the nineteenth century was the region most ardent for gun control. The heart of gun control country was Tennessee and Arkansas; courts there resisted some infringements of the right to arms, but eventually gave up. Heller and McDonald did not look to the Jim Crow cases as constructive precedents on the Second Amendment

    The Right to Arms in Nineteenth Century Colorado

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