Arthur J. Goldberg Papers

The Liberal Defense of Freedom
(unpublished manuscript)

Inventory  

Part I—The Court and Constitution in Theory and Practice 

1. The Rule of Law in a Free Society—The Judge Advocate General's Annual Survey of the Law, Andrews AFB, September 8, 1979—4 pages 

2. The Role of Law in a Free Society—Address, Annual University of Georgia Georgia Alumni Seminar, February 10, 1973; Georgia Law Review, v. 7, #3, 1973—10 pages 

3. Constitutional Faith—The Hugo Black Lecture, The University of Alabama School of Law, March 5, 1974—13 pages 

4.The Question of Impeachment—Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly, v. 1, #1, Spring 1974—12 pages 

5. The Constitution at 200 Years—Akron University, September 1987—15 pages 

6. There Shall Be "One Supreme Court"—Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly, v. 3, #2, Spring 1976—10 pages 

7. The Proposed National Court of Appeals—September 12, 1983—6 pages 

8. The Court Has Done Its Duty…Now Let the Nation Do Theirs—Address, Law Day, University of Alabama, April 8, 1972—13 pages 

9. The Struggle for Judicial Statesmanship in the Federal Courts—Address, Worcester State College, February 15, 1975--11 pages 

10. Judging the Judges-Are We a Government by the Judiciary?—Washington University School of Law, Fifth Annual Constitutional Law Conference-co-sponsored by the American Jewish Conference, October 23, 1982—7 pages 

11. Privacy and the Ninth Amendment, Griswold v. Connecticut—85 Supreme Court Reporter—14 pages 

12. The Reagan Supreme Court—no publication information—5 pages 

13. The Rehnquist Court—The Christian Science Monitor, July 24, 1986—5 pages 

14. Attorney General Edwin Meese v. Chief Justice John Marshall: The Question of "Original Intent"—no publication information—11 pages 

15. The Proposed Constitutional Convention—September 12, 1983—5 pages

 

Part II. Our Rights and Liberties in Theory  and Practice 

1. Can We Afford the Bill of Rights?—Address, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York, May 1989—14 pages 

2. Civil Rights: Changing or Eternal—April 14, 1983—11 pages 

3. Civil Rights in Troubled Times—Address, Notre Dame University, Center for Civil Rights, March 22, 1974—13 pages 

4. Crime and the Bill of Rights: Irreconcilable or Complimentary—Address, Chicago Crime Commission, October 12, 1983—12 pages 

5. The First Amendment and Its Protection—Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly, v. 8, #4, Fall 1980—10 pages 

6. Victims of Violence and Just Compensation—Southern California Law Review, v. 43, #1, 1970—5 pages 

6.5  The 17 Wiretaps-Illegal Then, Illegal Now—July 24, 1974—6 pages 

7. Statement on Behalf of the National Committee Against Preventive Detention—March 18, 1970—4 pages 

8. Equal Rights, Women, and the Fourteenth Amendment—Address, National Women's Law Center, November 13, 1987—4 pages 

9. In Support of the Free Exercise of Religion—The Christian Science Monitor, May 12, 1986—8 pages

10. The Wall of Separation of Church and State—November 3, 1988—7 pages 

11. Land Settlements of Alaskan Natives—no publication date—8 pages

 

Part III. Life and Death in the Supreme Court 

1. The Death Penalty Reaches the Supreme Court—1963—2 pages 

2. The Supreme Court Reaches Out and Touches Someone—Fatally—Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly, v. 10, #1 Fall 1982—13 pages 

3. Death and the Supreme Court—August 1987—7 pages 

4. The Death Penalty Revisited—Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly, v. 16, #1, Fall 1988—6 pages

5. Capital Punishment and the Constitution: The Eighth Amendment and Evolving Standards—South Texas Law Review, v. 27, #3, Fall 1986—23 pages

6. A Kinder and Gentler Supreme Court?—August 1989—6 pages

Part IV. International Law, Law, and American Foreign Policy: Squaring the Circle?

1. The Rule of Law in an Unruly World—Adlai E. Stevenson Memorial Lecture, School of International Affairs, Columbia University, May 18, 1966—21 pages 

2. Mediation and Arbitration of International Disputes—The Hofstra Law Review, v. 1 #1, Spring 1973—9 pages 

3. Human Rights—An Issue for Our Time—Hastings Law Journal, v. 29, #5, May 1978—7 pages 

4. The Need for a World Court of Human Rights—Howard Law Journal, v. 11, Spring 1965—4 pages

5. The Shoot-Out at the Libyan Self-Styled People's Bureau in London and Diplomatic Immunity Under the Vienna Convention—May 16, 1984—6 pages 

6.The Art of Diplomacy, the National Interest, and World Order—Address, Airlie House, Virginia, October 18, 1980—8 pages 

7. The Church and Social Action: World Order, Peace and Justice—Address, All Souls Church, Washington, D.C., March 5, 1972—7 pages 

8. Protection of Human Rights and Our Other Foreign Policy Goals: Are They Reconcilable?—No publication information—6 pages 

9. The Future of American Foreign Policy—August, 1975—6 pages 

[10]. Civil Disobedience and the Patriot—Address, American University, Washington, D.C., June 5, 1972—6 pages 

[11]. Courts-Martial for Poindexter and North—The Washington Post, February 17, 1987—4 pages

10. Covert Political Operations in a Democratic Foreign Policy—Address, Century Club, March 15, 1975—6 pages 

11. The Constitutional Limitations on the President's Powers—73 pages 

12. Executive Agreements—Testimony before  U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on the Separation of Powers, April 24, 1972—7 pages

13. Missing 

14. Waldheim Can Be Kept Out of the U.S.—New York Times, July 9, 1986 with Elizabeth Holtzman—3 pages 

15. Time to Act on the Genocide Convention—Prepared with Richard N. Gardner, American Bar Association Journal, v. 58, February 1972—17 pages 

16. Global Interdependence and the Law of the Sea—Address, Princeton University, April 6, 1979—7 pages 

Part V. Israel and the Middle East in American Foreign Policy: National Interest, Justice, and the Rule of Law 

1. Thoughts on the Holocaust—Address, Holocaust Day, Miami Beach, Florida, April 13, 1980—4 pages

2. Soviet Jewry—Address, World Conference on Soviet Jewry, Brussels, Belgium, February 21, 1971—11 pages

3. American Jews and the State of Israel—August 22, 1989—7 pages 

4. The Pollard Case Revisited—August 22, 1989—2 pages 

5. Resolution 242 After Twenty Years—no publication information—12 pages 

6. The Camp David Accords and Peace in the Middle East—Press Release, January 17, 1979—5 pages

7. Resolution 242 and Camp David—American Foreign Policy Newsletter, v. 11, #1, February 1988—5 pages 

8. The Climb Toward Mideast Peace—Christian Science Monitor, October 4, 1988—5 pages 

9. Findings of the Tribunal Relating to Claims of Jews from Arab Lands—1987—8 pages 

Part VI. All Things Considered 

1. No One Was Legally Minding the Store When the Assassination Attempt of President Reagan Occurred—no publication information—7 pages 

2. Public Education in a Democracy—Commencement Address, Radford University, Virginia, May 7, 1988—5 pages 

3. The Role of the Federal Government in Regulating Professional Sports—Address, University of Denver, May 31, 1974—15 pages 

4. Some Observations on the Effectiveness of Outside Directors—Journal of Contemporary Business, v. 8, #1, 1979—14 pages 

5. Tender Offers and Corporate Takeovers—no publication information—11 pages 

6. How Wall Street Takeovers Should be Cur[bed]—Christian Science Monitor, January 7, 1987—7 pages 

7. High Technology and Its International Impact—Address, School of Engineering, University of Santa Clara, California, March 22, 1979; reprinted in the Santa Clara Law Review, v. 19, #4, Fall 1979—8 pages 

8. The Department of Labor—1961-1962—no publication information—5 pages 

9. The 1988 Presidential Campaign-Neither of the Above—no publication information—3 pages 

10. On Becoming An American Citizen—Remarks at Naturalization Ceremonies, United States District Court, June 9, 1987—4 pages 

Appendix 1 

Letter to the Editor, Presidential Studies Quarterly re: 1962 steel crisis 

Appendix 2 

Statement re: Lyndon Baines Johnson's assertion in The Vantage Point that Goldberg was "bored" with the Supreme Court and actively solicited appointment as Ambassador to the United Nations—Press Release, October 26, 1971—3 pages 

Appendix 3 

Silver v. New York Stock Exchange—373 U.S. 341; 83 S. Ct. 1246—17 pages


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