John M. Williams; Iver W. Duedall; USA), Duedall, Iver W. Professor of Oceanography and Environmental Science, Florida Institu University Press of Florida (2002) Saatavuus: Painos loppu Pehmeäkantinen kirja
David M. Katzman; Thomas Paterson; William Tuttle; David W. Blight; Howard Chudacoff; Fredrik Logevall; Beth Bailey; Mary Beth N Wadsworth Publishing (2004) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Kovakantinen kirja
William Cooke Taylor; W. C. (William Cooke) Taylor Regents of Univ of Mi, Scholarly Publishing Office (2006) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Moira Stewart; Judith Belle Brown; W . Wayne Weston; Ian R. McWhinney; Carol McWilliam; Thomas R. Freeman SAGE Publications Inc (1995) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
Harold A. Winters; Gerald A. Galloway; William J. Reynolds; David W. Rhyne Johns Hopkins University Press (2001) Saatavuus: Tilaustuote Pehmeäkantinen kirja
William R Kropp; Mildred M Moe; Linda Price; Jonas Schultz; Henry W Sobel World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd (1991) Saatavuus: Painos loppu Kovakantinen kirja
In his foreword to Six Constitutions Over Texas: Texas’ Political Identity, 1830–1900, historian H. W. Brands describes the saga surrounding the development of the Texas state constitution as having “the sweep of a Russian novel... populated by characters as colorful as any of Tolstoy’s.” Indeed, even a glance at the table of contents reveals hints of international and regional conflict, intrigue, and shifting political alliances that characterized the rise and—in the case of the first five iterations—fall of the constitutions serving as the guiding document for what was variously a state of Mexico, an independent nation, a member of the Union, a Confederate state, and a newly subdued region under Reconstruction.
This meticulous study by legal historian William J. Chriss examines how Anglo Texans went about creating their political identity over three quarters of a century and the impact of those decisions. By delineating the social, political, military, and other considerations at play during the various stages of Texas’ development and how those factors manifested in the various constitutions, Chriss illuminates the process by which various groups constructed Texas “as an imagined community, an identity produced by ideological consensus among economic, cultural, and legal elites.”
Replete with insights on the ways in which systems of law impact social control and political identity, Six Constitutions Over Texas offers a fresh view of how shifting political ideologies were canonized with varying degrees of permanency in the state constitution.