Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution |
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Amendment XIV (the Fourteenth Amendment) of the United States Constitution is one of the post-Civil War amendments and includes the due process and equal protection clauses (Section 1).
Interpretation and historyThe first section defines who is a citizen of the United States and establishes that no state can enact laws that abridge certain rights of its citizens or persons within the jurisdiction of the United States. This section contains the due process and equal protection clauses and has had a notable impact on federal, state and local law in the United States; including the selective prosecution defense. Prior to the adoption of this amendment, the United States Bill of Rights so famously cherished by U.S. citizens acted only as a restraint on federal, not state, governments. Until that time states' control over its citizens was legally restrained only by that state's constitution and laws. Many of these states modeled their constitution and laws after the federal government of the United States, but state constitutions did not necessarily entail provisions like the Bill of Rights. With the adoption of this amendment and this section in particular, southern states were legally obligated to recognize certain rights of freed slaves. In response, southern states drew up Jim Crow and similar laws to perpetuate racial discrimination in the south. The expansion of "fundamental rights" under the Due Process clause was not anticipated by its sponsors. Yet under this clause the United States Supreme Court has recognized such rights as the right to abortion, the right to contraceptives, the right to medical treatment, and the right to marry. The second section establishes rules for the apportioning of representatives in Congress to states, essentially making the proportion of that state's representation equal to that state's proportion of the nation's population excluding males under the age of 21, the disenfranchised, and Indians who do not pay taxes. The third section prevents the election of any person to the Congress or Electoral College who has engaged in insurrection[?], rebellion[?], or treason. A two-thirds vote by Congress can override this limitation, however. The fourth section establishes the validity of any public debts the United States government enters into, with exceptions for debts related to insurrection, rebellion, or claims for the loss or emancipation of any slave. Such debts are declared illegal and void.
Annotated text
External linkhttp://www.archives.gov/exhibit_hall/charters_of_freedom/constitution/amendments_11-27.html#14 |
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