My debate topic is whether or not judicial activism is necessary for the protection of American citizens' rights. If I am the aff, I need to prove that things like Brown vs. Board of Education, Miranda rights, right to have counsel appointed, right to abortion, right to contraception, etc. could have only been done through the courts and could not have been done by passing laws through the legislative branch. If I am the neg I need to bring up things like the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and say any of the major rights and/or policies brought about by supreme court decisions could have been done through the legislative branch, and that doing it through the judicial branch was unnecessary and unconstitutional.
This is just high school, and I need to write this case by tonight, so I don't want any heavy duty research. All I want is a little simple, easy to get information giving me the major supreme court cases and major legislation passed throughout US history and a brief overview of them. This isn't research, I'm just reading it to get the concept and get some examples.
The only thing I have going for the aff at the moment is that decisions on rights and the interpretation of the constitution should not be done through the legislature because politics will get into it, and decisions might be made as a result of a concession or something, and that is not the way constitutional decisions could be made. The legislature is the arena for passing bills and specific policies, not making general, theoretical decisions on the interpretation of the constitution.
But all the neg has to do is say that these major court cases and laws that have changed our country for the better could have been done by the legislature. It would also help if I could say judicial activism is unconstitutional. Because if the judges can make decisions and in effect make laws without having to answer to anyone, that would be unrestrained power.
Anything would be appreciated.
This is just high school, and I need to write this case by tonight, so I don't want any heavy duty research. All I want is a little simple, easy to get information giving me the major supreme court cases and major legislation passed throughout US history and a brief overview of them. This isn't research, I'm just reading it to get the concept and get some examples.
The only thing I have going for the aff at the moment is that decisions on rights and the interpretation of the constitution should not be done through the legislature because politics will get into it, and decisions might be made as a result of a concession or something, and that is not the way constitutional decisions could be made. The legislature is the arena for passing bills and specific policies, not making general, theoretical decisions on the interpretation of the constitution.
But all the neg has to do is say that these major court cases and laws that have changed our country for the better could have been done by the legislature. It would also help if I could say judicial activism is unconstitutional. Because if the judges can make decisions and in effect make laws without having to answer to anyone, that would be unrestrained power.
Anything would be appreciated.
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