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Legal Progressivism, the Courts, and the Crisis of the 1890's*

Arnold M. Paul

Business History Review, 1959, vol. 33, issue 4, 495-509

Abstract: Reform spokesmen, believing that fundamental issues of social control were involved, hailed the refusal of the judiciary to intervene in the 1880's against state regulation of corporate power. The progressive triumph was short-lived. Reversing the earlier trend, the courts retreated into economic conservatism, but in so doing generated the fierce pressures that were later to explode into new outbursts of legal and social revolt.

Date: 1959
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