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Article
The Right to Keep and Bear Arms Under the Tennessee Constitution: A Case Study in Civic Republican Thought
Tennessee Law Review (1994)
  • Glenn Reynolds
Abstract
State constitutional rights to arms are of considerable interest, both for their own sake and as sources of insight into the meaning of the Federal Constitution's right to keep and bear arms. This article examines the origins and scope of the right to arms provided in the Tennessee Constitution, including Tennessee cases that, interestingly, were cited as authority by the United States Supreme Court in the 1939 case of United States v. Miller, one of the Supreme Court's few cases to address Second Amendment issues in any depth.
Keywords
  • law,
  • government and politics,
  • constitutional law,
  • state law,
  • second amendment,
  • Republican party
Disciplines
Publication Date
Winter 1994
Citation Information
Glenn Reynolds. "The Right to Keep and Bear Arms Under the Tennessee Constitution: A Case Study in Civic Republican Thought" Tennessee Law Review Vol. 61 Iss. 2 (1994) p. 647 - 674
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/glenn-reynolds/60/