Review:
Professor Henn has written an important book about the cluster of issues that ought to matter most in a democracy. Under the Color of Law will enjoy a wide readership, and deservedly so.--Joseph Margulies, Northwestern University School of Law, author of Guantanamo and the Abuse of Presidential Power
This will be the classic analysis of the legal aspects of the Bush wars. Martin Henn gives, first, a brilliant study of the Bush Administration's orders and written opinions. On the other side, he presents the relevant details of the U.S. Constitution and applicable international law. In this impressive and most careful consideration of all the significant documents on both sides, Under the Color of Law makes clear that the Bush administration was illegal, immoral, and inefficient in its 'war on terror.' Nothing else that I have seen on these matters is more important.--Sidney Axinn
For those who admire the courage of a David who can take on a Goliath, Martin Henn's new book will proved to be an exhilarating read. Armed with the erudition of a classicist and the analytic intelligence of an adept philosopher, Henn has taken on the overblown pretensions of an imperial presidency, arguing with such force and clarity that he has convinced this reader that he just might win his battle. If his book gets the attention it deserves, the Obama Administration may have to surrender the wrongful extension of presidential power that took place under George W. Bush. On another front we can be even more hopeful: Leo Strauss's attempt (rendered dangerous once his disciples found their way to political power) to read the natural-law tradition through a Macchiavellian and Hobbesian lens has now found its definitive answer: Plato and Aristotle, Aquinas and Grotius, are on the side of civilization and the rule of law.--Joseph Lawrence, College of the Holy Cross
Martin Henn's Under the Color of Law is an essential text for anyone concerned--and distressed--about Bush administration policies on torture. Henn's discussion centers around the key memos and executive orders that rationalized the Bush practices of torture. He provides an invaluable commentary on them, explaining their relation to larger questions of domestic and international law and the politics of executive power. Henn's discussion is both illuminating and sharply critical of these documents, placing them in the context of legal and political history. I cannot think of a more useful book for anyone studying the sad events of our recent history with torture. His book contributes to our country's ongoing re-evaluation of our moral responsibilities in these matters.--Cheyney Ryan, University of Oregon and Oxford University
Martin Henn begins this book by asking whether there is any historical analogy to a republic's open suspension of law on the scale practiced in the George W. Bush presidency. He suggests that the closest was when the Roman republic granted Pompey temporary dictatorial powers (three years) that went beyond republican practice to battle a state (Pontus under King Mithridates) that was sponsoring nonstate terrorists (pirates). Yet Pompey refrained from punishing political rivals, provided trials, and did not employ torture in interrogations. In this rigorously argued book, history, jurisprudence, and the natural law tradition are employed in a convincing demonstration that the second Bush administration knowingly and arrogantly defied international law, historical precedent, and the US Constitution.--Gary Shapiro, Tucker-Boatwright Professor in the Humanities-Philosophy, University of Richmond
About the Author:
Martin Henn is former assistant professor at Fitchburg State University, in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.