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Books with title The Constitution of the United States of America .

  • The United States Constitution

    Kristal Leebrick

    Paperback (Capstone Press, Sept. 1, 2000)
    Discusses how and why the United States Constitution was created; includes the difficulties with ratification by the states; and explains the Bill of Rights.
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  • Pocket Constitution of the united States

    Delegates of the Constitutional Convention

    Paperback (National Center for Constitutional Studies, March 15, 2005)
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  • The Constitution of the United States

    Karen Judson

    Library Binding (Enslow Pub Inc, Jan. 1, 1996)
    Discusses the history and importance of the United States Constitution and how it is applied to decision making and laws in America
  • United States of America

    Michael Burgan

    Library Binding (Childrens Pr, March 1, 2008)
    Presents the geography, climate, wildlife, history, culture, economy, government, and people of the United States of America.
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  • Teach Me About the United States Constitution

    Toretha Wright

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Dec. 23, 2017)
    Teach Me About…The United States Constitution The Constitution is a very important document! Not for its historical significance, but because it is the law by which we live in society. As a matter-of-fact, our Constitution is the highest law in the United States, and it applies to all Americans. The Constitution tells us how our three branches of government work. In addition to spelling out the laws of the land, it tells how the President, the Congress, and the Supreme Court keeps the country running, although not always smoothly. Read other Red Scholar books: Cory the Frog Finds the Missing Alphabets J’me and the Butterflies Can Count to 10 Teach Me About the 50 United States Teach Me About the United States. Constitution Teach Me About the United States Presidents Teach Me About Black History The Candy Store Owner, A Mystery
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  • The United States Constitution

    Avery Elizabeth Hurt

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square Publishing, Jan. 15, 2019)
    John Adams said that the United States was a nation of laws. Of all the United States' laws, the legal principles laid out in the U.S. Constitution are the foundation of the country. The document defines the country's deepest ideals, its highest standards, and its wildest ambitions. The Constitution has served as the nation's guiding star for over two hundred years, with only twenty-seven amendments in all that time. Understanding it is the one sure way to understand the best of what the United States can be, which this book allows for your readers.
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  • The United States Constitution

    Karen Price Hossell

    Library Binding (Heinemann, Oct. 27, 2003)
    Open the pages of this book to get an inside look at the United States Constitution. Find out about the Constitutional Convention and who attended, what issues were most debated among delegates to the Convention, and the importance of the U.S. Constitution in American history. In this book you will also discover: what events brought about a need for the U.S. Constitution; who was involved in writing the U.S. Constitution; and how amendments to the U.S. Constitution are added and what they are.
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  • An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States

    Charles A. Beard

    Paperback (Independently published, July 29, 2019)
    The whole theory of the economic interpretation of history rests upon the concept that social progress in general is the result of contending interests in society - some favorable, others opposed, to change. On this hypothesis, we are required to discover at the very outset of the present study what classes and social groups existed in the United States just previous to the adoption of the Constitution and which of them, from the nature of their property, might have expected to benefit immediately and definitely by the overthrow of the old system and the establishment of the new. On the other hand, it must be discovered which of them might have expected more beneficial immediate results, on the whole, from the maintenance of the existing legal arrangements. The importance of a survey of the distribution of property in 1787 for economic as well as political history is so evident that it is strange that no attempt has been made to undertake it on a large scale. Not even a beginning has been made. It is, therefore, necessary for us to rely for the present upon the general statements of historians who have written more or less at length about the period under consideration; but in the meanwhile it can do no harm to suggest, by way of a preface, the outlines of such a survey and some of the chief sources of information. - Taken from "An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States" written by Charles A. Beard
  • The United States Constitution and the Bill of Rights: The Law of the Land

    Anna Keegan

    Paperback (Powerkids Pr, Aug. 1, 2015)
    Introduces the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, descibring their creation, importance, and later changes to the document.
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  • An Economic Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States

    Charles Beard

    Paperback (Routledge, May 2, 1998)
    In his piercing introduction to An Economic Interpretation the author wrote that “whoever leaves economic pressures out of history or out of discussion of public questions is in mortal peril of substituting mythology for reality.” It was Beard’s view that the founding fathers, especially Madison, Jay, and Hamilton, never made such a miscalculation. Indeed, these statesmen placed themselves among the great practitioners of all ages and gave instructions to succeeding generations in the art of government by their vigorous deployment of classical political economy. In this new printing of a major classic in American historiography, Louis Filler provides a sense of the person behind the book, the background that enabled Beard to move well beyond the shibboleths of the second decade of the twentieth century. While the controversies over Beard’s book have quieted, the issues which it raised have hardly abated. Indeed, one can say that just about every major work in the politics and economics of the American nation must contend with Beard’s classic work. Beard’s work rests on an examination of primary documents: land and slave owners, geographic distribution of money, ownership of public securities, the specific condition of those who were disenfranchised as well as those who were in charge of the nascent American economy. The great merit of Beard’s work is that despite its incendiary potential, he himself viewed An Economic Interpretation in coldly analytical terms, seeing such a position as giving comfort to neither revolutionaries nor reactionaries. Attacked by Marxists for being too mechanical, and by conservatives as being blind to the moral purposes of the framers of the constitution, the work continues to exercise a tremendous influence on all concerned. The fact that Beard wrote with a scalpel-like precision that gripped the attention of those in power no less than the common man is, it should be added, no small element in the enduring forces of this work.
  • The United States Constitution

    Therese Shea

    Library Binding (Gareth Stevens Pub Learning library, Aug. 1, 2013)
    Though the shortest single-document constitution in the world, the US Constitution has bound our nation together since 1789. The Constitution and the term "constitutional" are bandied about in the media a lot, but many people don't even know what's in the document. Readers of this book will discover its content, article by article, as well as look at the Bills of Rights and other amendments. Fun facts enliven the text, and sidebars delve into lesser-known constitutional issues.
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  • The United States Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation

    Jonathan Hennessey, Aaron McConnell

    Paperback (Hill and Wang, Oct. 14, 2008)
    Our leaders swear to uphold it, our military to defend it. It is the blueprint for the shape and function of government itself and what defines Americans as Americans. But how many of us truly know our Constitution? The United States Constitution: A Graphic Adaptation uses the art of illustrated storytelling to breathe life into our nation’s cornerstone principles. Simply put, it is the most enjoyable and groundbreaking way to read the governing document of the United States. Spirited and visually witty, it roves article by article, amendment by amendment, to get at the meaning, background, and enduring relevance of the law of the land. What revolutionary ideas made the Constitution’s authors dare to cast off centuries of rule by kings and queens? Why do we have an electoral college rather than a popular vote for president and vice president? How did a document that once sanctioned slavery, denied voting rights to women, and turned a blind eye to state governments running roughshod over the liberties of minorities transform into a bulwark of protection for all? The United States Constitution answers all of these questions. Sure to surprise, challenge, and provoke, it is hands down the most memorable introduction to America’s founding document.