You are not signed in. Sign in.

List Books: Buy books on ListBooks.org

Lochner v. New York: Economic Regulation on Trial » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of Lochner v. New York: Economic Regulation on Trial by Paul Kens

Authors: Paul Kens
ISBN-13: 9780700609192, ISBN-10: 0700609199
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Date Published: October 1998
Edition: 1st Edition

Find Best Prices for This Book »

Author Biography: Paul Kens

Book Synopsis

Lochner v. New York (1905), which pitted a conservative activist judiciary against a reform-minded legislature, remains one of the most important and most frequently cited cases in Supreme Court history. In this concise and readable guide, Paul Kens shows us why the case remains such an important marker in the ideological battles between the free market and the regulatory state.

The Supreme Court's decision declared unconstitutional a New York State law limiting bakery workers to no more than ten hours per day or sixty hours per week. By evoking its "police power," the state hoped to eliminate the employers' abuse of these workers. But the 5-4 majority opinion, authored by Justice Rufus Peckham and renounced by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, cited the state's violation of due process and the "right of contract between employers and employees," which the majority believed was protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.

Critics jumped on the decision as an example of conservative juidicial activism promoting laissez-faire capitalism at the expense of progressive reform. As series editors Peter Hoffer and N.E.H. Hull note in their preface, "the case also raised a host of significant questions regarding the impetus of state legislatures to enter the workplace and regulate hours, wages, and working conditions; of the role of courts as monitors of the constitutionality of state regulation of the economy; and of the place of economic and moral theories in judicial thinking."

Kens, however, reminds us that these hotly contested ideas and principles emerged from a very real human drama involving workers, owners, legislators, lawyers, and judges. Within the crucible of an industrializing America, their story reflected the fierce competition between two powerful ideologies.

This book is part of the Landmark Law Cases and American Society series.

Booknews

Kens (political science and history, Southwest Texas State U.) studies a 1905 Supreme Court overturning, of a New York State law limiting bakery workers to no more than ten hours a day. The decision was criticized as promoting laissez-faire capitalism at the expense of progressive reform. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Table of Contents

Editors' Preface
Acknowledgments
1Introduction1
2Not Like Grandma Used to Bake6
3A Long Struggle for Shorter Hours15
4The Politics of Business as Usual28
5Tenement Reform Looks in the Cellar49
6Free to Bake or Left to Toil?67
7Nothing to Do with Due Process89
8Freedom to Agree to Anything111
9The Final Forum129
10Reform's Nemesis143
11The Lochner Era154
12Epilogue177
Chronology189
Bibliographical Essay195
Index201

Subjects