The Volokh Conspiracy
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RIP, Ken Kersch
I just learned that Ken Kersch, a political science professor at Boston College, has passed away. I knew and liked Ken, a lot, and I also benefitted a great deal from his work, especially his book Constructing Civil Liberties. The book deserves more attention than it's received, especially among law professors, so I thought I would reprint my review of the book from The American Historical Review:
This is a relentlessly interesting book, one that can't help but change the way the reader understands twentieth century American constitutional development. As Kersch persuasively argues, for much of the late twentieth century, American constitutional history was dominated by a whiggish narrative in which progressive forces consistently supportive of civil rights and civil liberties triumphed over the dark forces of reaction. This whiggish narrative, however, is full of holes.
For example, progressives of the early twentieth century fought mightily against privacy rights protected by the fourth and fifth amendments, in the name of the right of publicity. More specifically, the statebuilding project supported by progressives required that American businesses be subjected to intrusive and unprecedented inspection by regulatory and other legal authorities. Even future Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis's famous 1890 article supporting a constitutional "right to privacy"—later cited as the progenitor of modern "right to privacy" cases such as Griswold v. Connecticut—actually did not advocate a right to privacy that modern civil libertarians would even begin to recognize. Quite to the contrary, the article advocated recognition of a tort for invasion of privacy as a means of censoring even rather tepid tabloid journalism. Only after progressives had soundly defeated the "old" right to privacy in the economic sphere and established the modern bureaucratic state did they reimagine the right to privacy in terms congenial to modern liberalism, as an island of personal autonomy in a sea of statism. This victory also allowed them to revive the Fourth and Fifth Amendments in the service of protecting street criminals.
The whiggish narrative also asserts that a defining characteristic of American progressivism has been solicitude for the rights of oppressed minorities, especially African Americans. In fact, however, before the New Deal era most progressives were at best indifferent to African Americans' plight. Indeed, some were openly hostile to African American, and launched such progressive schemes as the wave of residential segregation laws that swept through the United States in the 1910s. These laws were invalidated by a unanimous decision of the "conservative" Supreme Court in Buchanan v. Warley in 1917, to a chorus of criticism by progressive legal scholars.
Organized labor, not civil rights, was the favored cause of progressives in the early twentieth century, and labor unions, especially AFL and railroad unions, were themselves hostile to African Americans. African Americans, in turn, for the most part fiercely opposed labor unionism. In alliance with the businesses that often provided them with work over white workers' objections, African Americans supported such "reactionary" policies as labor injunctions, strikebreaking, and the legality of yellow dog contracts. Kens argues that progressives only embraced the cause of civil rights when African Americans dropped their prior attachment to pre-New Deal individualistic conceptions of rights, and, modeling themselves on the successful model of organized labor, organized themselves as a constitutional class entitled to group rights in a statist legal and economic superstructure.
Finally, progressive conceptions of appropriate education policy were for the most part driven far more by a vision of imposing a centralized, statist school system on the American people than on any principled conception of civil liberties and separation of church and state. Progressive intellectuals strongly opposed the Meyer, Pierce, and Tokushige Supreme Court opinions of the 1920s, which protected local school board prerogatives and private schooling against progressive demands for homogenization and centralization of education. Progressives, in fact, were overtly hostile to the very existence of Catholic parochial schools; the constitutionality of banning such schools was at the heart of the Pierce case. By the 1960s, progressives and their allies on the scholarly community reinterpreted the quintessentially conservative Supreme Court cases—which their roots in the "reactionary" Lochner v. New York tradition—as civil libertarian cases protecting individual autonomy from conservative religious forces (see Griswold v. Connecticut and Roe v. Wade). However, progressive hostility to traditional Catholicism continued, as the history of both of these cases makes clear.
Similarly, after the New Deal, the overtly statist progressive attempt to in the 1920s to outlaw Catholic schools morphed into an attempt to ensure that government aid to Catholic schools was beyond the constitutional pale. The "civil libertarian" doctrine promulgated to accomplish this goal was the "separation of church and state." Courts initially used this doctrine primarily to suppress government assistance to Catholic schools and Catholic-dominated "release time" programs. However, as atheists and liberal Jews became increasingly influential in separationist organizations, the attack on Catholic education morphed into a broader war against expressions of Christian religious sentiment in the public schools, culminating in the Lemon v. Kurtzman decision in 1971. Not surprisingly, whiggish narratives neglect the anti-Catholic sentiment that initially spurred these constitutional developments.
Kersch puts all of these examples into the broad framework of American political and constitutional development. Most historians, law professors, and political scientists who write about constitutional history likely think of themselves as independent liberal, perhaps even radical, critics of their government. Kersch, however, will have none of it. He accuses the scholars who spun and sustained the fanciful but entirely mainstream whiggish narrative of the development of "civil rights and civil liberties" of "being heavily implicated in the political project of justifying, institutionalizing and … defending the New Deal constitutional regime." Rather than serving as the incisive and independent critics of their own imagination, the academic establishment has served as an implicit fourth (or fifth) branch of government, rewriting American history to retroactively justify the revolutionary changes to the American conception of rights, liberties, and the proper role of government that the New Deal precipitated and institutionalized.
Ultimately, this short review cannot do justice to the brilliance of Kersch's insights, or the breadth of his research. Suffice to say that Kersch is fully up to the challenge of explaining and defending a revisionist thesis of tremendous magnitude. Constructing Civil Liberties is simply the most provocative and enlightening book on constitutional history that I have ever read.
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I'm not sure what whiggish means but it seems like Prof. Bernstein is using it as a pejorative.
: of, relating to, or characterized by a view which holds that history follows a path of inevitable progression and improvement and which judges the past in light of the present
I guess I'm partly whiggish since I hold the view that history follows a path of inevitable progression and improvement (even though it's not a straight path and there are ups and downs, and fallbacks sometimes).
I don't hold the second view about judging the past in light of the present.
Fallbacks are the rule. Impirical data says so. We have no confidence we are not in another brief interstice of freedom between periods of dictatorial drudgery and corruption parasitic plague.
200 years and counting? Wow! Tell that to the Romans or Greeks, who had democracy, or something a half step away, yet fell due to things like granting someone emergency powers.
Yesterday, South Korea. Today, Georgia, as in former Soviet Republic. Like Ukraine, certain corrupt dictator wannabees would prefer to pivot back to Putin than go into the EU.
Is it coincidence, or is it forseeing an opportunity to fall back? Why would people in positions of power around the world think this, like the Phillipines guy did some years back?
Oooh, live! Here come the Georgian enforcers against the opposition!
"Impirical data says so."
I can see you're an expert on "impericism." What data do you refer to?
Whig history.
"This victory also allowed them to revive the Fourth and Fifth Amendments in the service of protecting street criminals."
This is an outlandish statement.
No it isn't -- those amendments do protect street criminals.
95% of the people that the police arrest *are* guilty -- it's because of the 5% that we care about these things.
They protect innocent people, and criminals just happen to benefit because we value protecting the innocent.
David's statement implies that the point was to protect criminals, or that they were reinterpreted to benefit criminals. Which isn't the case.
I took David's statement to say that the point actually WAS to protect innocent people, and that they'd been in some way perverted to specifically protect the guilty.
And there's something to this: The Fourth amendment protects everybody from having the government poking around in their stuff without good reason, but in modern application it extends you basically no protection outside of a criminal trial; If the government isn't going to use the product of the search against you legally, poof! The right effectively vanishes, because the only way it's vindicated is the exclusionary rule, which means it's not vindicated AT ALL if the government doesn't mean to put you on trial.
Contrast this with the founding era approach, where if an agent of the government intruded upon your property without a warrant, they were subject to the law of trespass, if they seized your property without one, they were legally guilty of theft. That properly vindicated the right even for those who weren't accused of criminality.
And the worst part Brett is that it isn't a violation if they violate EVERYONE's rights.
For example, OUI roadblocks where one is forced to prove his innocence.
Or the Metro Boston MBTA where they ask if they can search you, but you are trespassed from the system if you refuse.
Yeah, I'm not a big fan of that requirement for a "particularized" injury, where if the government injures a large enough class of people, you're not allowed to challenge it in court.
That is not correct. You can challenge it if you suffer a personal injury beyond the abstract generalized one.
See, you contradict me, then agree: The government violates my constitutional rights alone? Particularized injury.
The government violates everybody's constitutional rights? No recourse to the courts.
I see the problem: you think the government not following BrettLaw is violating everyone's constitutional rights.
There is no recourse to the courts for Brettlaw violations, 'tis true.
Do you want to get rid of the exclusionary rule and rely on, what, torts against officers? Because that seems to me to be the ultimate "letting the perfect be the enemy of the good."
It actually did work for a long while, but it requires a system under which prosecutors can't simply refuse to prosecute such cases, which was what drove the Court to invent the exclusionary principle.
It is an outlandish statement, though I find it interesting some stating this, correctly, are in full throated support of violating the 4th and 5th Amendments, in both spirit and letter, in going after political opposition, which is the real purpose for them, not protecting yokels in petty crime.
I've often proposed eliminating both the exclusionary rule and sovereign immunity -- i.e. if the cops conduct an illegal search and find something, it gets used at trial. But if they conduct something and *don't* find anything, they are looking at a multimillion dollar judgement, with both personal and employer liability.
Somehow I suspect that the police would police themselves.
"They protect innocent people, and criminals just happen to benefit"
"They protect criminals, and innocent people just happen to benefit" is what you meant, I think.
Lots of re-writing here.
Here, "street criminals" is probably being used in a pejorative sense where the type of street in mind is the asphalt type of street, perhaps in the hood, for crimes that involve petty thefts and muggings. But these amendments protect criminals on other fancier types of streets, such as wall street, just as well. Or any other type of accused person, even far away from any street, from the prosecutorial power of the state. No matter what percentage of them are guilty as sin, the fancier types of street criminals stand a better chance of getting off.
Very sad about Ken. He was barely 60. Wonder what took him out.
"In the service of" means that this was the purpose. As it was not the purpose, even if street criminals benefit, it is at least an inaccurate statement.
"This is an outlandish statement."
"This is a true statement" is what you meant to write.
Read the book, and see if you still think it's outlandish.
"the overtly statist progressive attempt to in the 1920s to outlaw Catholic schools morphed into an attempt to ensure that government aid to Catholic schools was beyond the constitutional pale."
As an educator, I have to disagree -- it was 45-60 years before this.
The so called "Blaine Amendment" to the US Constitution was proposed in 1875 and while it passed the House in a 180-7 vote, it was four votes shy of the required 2/3 in the Senate and hence died. But a lot of states already had their own state Blaine Amendments which is what the Trinity Lutheran case was all about.
Thomas Nash's 1871 cartoon "the American river Ganges" reflects the opinion of the time, although one needs to remember that the Populist and Progressive movements happened concurrently, and this was more Populist than Progressive.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaine_Amendment#/media/File:American_river_Ganges_crop.jpg
What needs to be remembered is that the Bible was read in public schools back then. As late as 1962, a high school teacher was required to start the day with "an appropriate reading from the Bible."
The Bible is written in the languages that people spoke at the time -- Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, & Latin -- and has been translated into English. The Protestants used the King James version while the Catholics used the Revised Standard (?) version -- and while the passages meant the same thing, they used different words.
It's wild to me that anyone in this country would want the bible (or any religious text, but I note the bible because of the recent Texas law) taught in elementary and middle schools. At least at the high school level you'll expect some measure of critical thinking.
A state entity shouldn't be supporting any particular view or making any interpretation of a religious text in a religious manner, let alone teaching it in a religious manner or taking a position on whether or not (or how much of it) is true. The Christian denominations can't agree on how to interpret or translate the Bible, how could the state?
Further, how can it be taught to 1st graders in a way that makes most people happy. Most people who have Christian kids don't want the government teaching it as historical literature, with the view that some people believe it is true, and some people don't. They don't even like that idea on a conceptual level. Further, Teachers aren't experts on the bible. It's not a class most people have taken, nor something they have generally studied academically or made a focus of their lives.
It's better today, where schools don't teach religion and parents handle that aspect of kids lives at home. Leave it as part of a social studies class where it's taught that it is the foundational text of one of many religions worldwide.
Regardless of your view of that, Ed is certainly right about the timing. The attack on Catholic schools started way before the 1920's.
Brett, the Catholics weren't completely innocent.
I can't remember the details but when the Irish Catholics had the numbers to outvote the WASPs, they started imposing literacy tests on the Harvard professors who wished to vote in city elections.
James Michael Curley -- an interesting individual.
The professors moved out to Arlington, which had a railroad, a portion of which is the Red Line.
Catholics would deny that any human is completely innocent; It's a key theological point! That being the case, how could Catholics as a group be completely innocent?
Or any facts at all, really.
"It's better today, where schools don't teach religion and parents handle that aspect of kids lives at home."
Not sure how someone can look at our drug and gambling addicted/sexually deviant culture and conclude this was a change for the better.
Not sure how someone can look at our drug and gambling addicted/sexually deviant culture and conclude this was a change for the better.
Not sure how someone can look at past culture of extreme sexual and racial discrimination at all levels and unpunished violence against minorities and women, and conclude that we have changed for the worse.
First, the only reason the Constitution doesn't say that this is a Christian nation is that no one saw any need to do so. They thought it was implied -- although they also thought that about the Bill of Rights.
Second, throughout history, Biblical references were part of American culture. Look at the writings of Lincoln. I argue that to understand American history -- and American culture today -- you need to have fluency in the Bible, regardless of if you believe it or not.
Yes, the Catholics and Protestants were fighting over the wording of the Bible -- but not what it meant and it is a pity that they didn't realize that. The Catholic church post Vatican II and post Pope John Paul II is a very different church, and the Protestant churches have changed too. (Most initially banned organ music and stained glass windows.)
the only reason the Constitution doesn't say that this is a Christian nation is that no one saw any need to do so.
The only reason the Constitution doesn't say that we're ruled by reptilian aliens is that no-one saw any need to do so.
Meanwhile, the 1797 Treaty of Tripoli, ratified unanimously by the US Senate says, in the English version, "the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion." (There is a question over whether this exists in any form in the Arabic version. However, it was the English version that the Senate ratified.)
So people much closer in time to the US constitution evidently disagree with you.
I mean, George Washington explicitly rejected the idea that this was a Christian nation, when he had no external pressure to do so. This is no treaty of Tripoli where it helps for a political purpose. He said it, of his own accord, to an audience he chose to speak to, without any political pressure on what he said.
https://reason.com/volokh/2024/05/28/good-and-evil-in-the-american-founding/
"Yes, the Catholics and Protestants were fighting over the wording of the Bible -- but not what it meant"
WTF? Why were they fighting over the wording if they thought it all meant the same regardless?
Yeah, that's more than a bit of an exaggeration.
Gentle reminder: The King James version was created by a church manhandled into existence by a king whom the Pope would not grant an annulment.
No matter how rotten the Pope was, or Catholics, that seems to fail a sort of religious epistemology, at least of the type pushed from ancient times through TV preachers.
That's my second favorite anecdote of the Trvthiness of the Bible, after the set of OT books recognized by Christians were set by a bunch of Jews who had already rejected Jesus.
Regardless of why it was done, it was well done.
And some of us love the Old English, words like "smite" aren't around today...
Still in use in D&D.
"Only after progressives had soundly defeated the "old" right to privacy in the economic sphere and established the modern bureaucratic state did they reimagine the right to privacy in terms congenial to modern liberalism, as an island of personal autonomy in a sea of statism. This victory also allowed them to revive the Fourth and Fifth Amendments in the service of protecting street criminals."
Wow, this says a lot. Privacy protections for businesses, good; privacy protections for personal autonomy, a sop; privacy protections for the accused, yuck!
David - On a first read of this post, I actually thought, "Hm, maybe I should check this book out." I'll confess my reading pile is a bit too tall as it is, but I'd be curious to know more about this alternative account of recent constitutional history.
Unfortunately, the bit of invective about "protecting street criminals" that you allow yourself - absolutely in character for you, but usually absent from your more sober writing - makes me question whether I can trust Kersch's historical analysis.
The Fourth and Fifth Amendment's modern use to protect "street criminals" or "common street criminals" is stated as such by Kersch on pages 35-36, but thanks for playing.
You simply state the term without quotes in your summary of his work that you note is "persuasive" so seem to support the term too.
He said it was my “bit of invective.” It’s neither mine nor invective, but rather Kersch’s apt description of the primary beneficiaries of the Warren Court’s 4th and 5th Amendment jurisprudence. But neither Kersch nor I suggest that such criminals don’t have have Fourth or Fifth Amendment rights, just that modern civil libertarians limited the rights that previously accrued to others, but then expanded rights to them, complicating the story that they were expanding rights for all.
Yeah, I thought that was actually pretty clear, as I explained above: The right of everybody to not have the government poking about in your stuff got transformed into a right to not have the results of the government poking about in your stuff used against you in a trial. A right much more useful to criminals than to the average person.
Because the regulatory state would be really hard to run if the government had to plausibly allege a crime in order to poke about in people's stuff...
It is invective. If your defense is simply that the invective is Kersch's rather than your own, then all you seem to be stating is that I can't trust Kersch's account any more than I can trust yours.
Your loss if you don't read the book because he calls street criminals "street criminals," though I suppose "alleged street criminals" would be more exact.
The question is more whether I can trust that Kersch's work is intellectually honest and academically thorough. Your post makes it sound at least interesting, and perhaps worth the effort, if it's not going to be a whole homework project to doublecheck his work for its accuracy. (The way I find I must doubt and doublecheck much of what you write here.)
Your decision to turn this thread into yet another Twitter fight is disappointing, and doesn't tend to persuade me that Kersch's work is worth my time. You say, "your loss," but try to understand that your advocacy and intemperate rhetoric is what's pushing me away from his work, despite your review's otherwise making it seem attractive.
The whole selective framing is somewhat tiresome if not surprisingly quoted with approval. Consider this tidbit:
By the 1960s, progressives and their allies on the scholarly community reinterpreted the quintessentially conservative Supreme Court cases—which their roots in the "reactionary" Lochner v. New York tradition—as civil libertarian cases protecting individual autonomy from conservative religious forces (see Griswold v. Connecticut and Roe v. Wade). However, progressive hostility to traditional Catholicism continued, as the history of both of these cases makes clear.
I'll put aside that a Catholic justice signed on to both cases.
Traditional Catholics could continue to practice their religion if they wished, including by not using barrier birth control or having abortions. The "hostility" was to government policies that interfered with religious liberty (among other things). Multiple Catholic Church clergy agreed with Griswold as a matter of law, understanding it protected individual religious choice.
I suppose racial equality cases were "hostile" to traditional religious beliefs that supported the separation of the races too. At least when state action was involved.
I said the history of the cases, not the rulings themselves, demonstrate hostility to Catholicism. You should read the section on the level of hostility to Catholicism in the 1950s Protestant establishment. It was quite eye opening to me. If you have never heard of Paul Balanchard, it will be eye-opening to you as well.