
THE SECOND FOUNDING: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, by Ilan Wurman. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2020. pp188. Paperback $20.99. ISBN: 978-1-108-82395-1. Online $20.99 ISBN: 978-1-108-91495-6.
Reviewed by Staci L. Beavers. Department of Political Science, California State University San Marcos. Email: sbeavers@csusm.edu.
While perhaps not a sequel in Marvel fans’ sense of the term, Ilan Wurman’s The Second Founding: An Introduction To The Fourteenth Amendment follows up on his first book, published in 2017. Legal scholar Wurman wrote A Debt Against The Living: An Introduction To Originalism “to introduce originalism to a broader audience” through acquainting readers with prominent originalist-oriented scholarship (p. 4). This time Wurman turns the reader’s attention to originalist debates over the Fourteenth Amendment to “explain[] the debates, provide[] the best arguments of the various sides, and then offer[] [his] own position” (p. 4) on the original meaning of critical components within Section 1 of the amendment. More broadly, he aspires to demonstrate that, given its emphasis on non-discrimination, “[t]he original meaning of the 14th amendment is not scary” (p. 144). While his success with this latter goal is debatable, Wurman pulls together a great overview of prominent originalist scholarship and historical context that provides a thought-provoking potential alternative to polarized takes on the amendment’s application in civil liberties and civil rights cases.
While attending to Section 1’s birthright citizenship provision along the way, Wurman’s points of focus are the intended meanings of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process, Equal Protection, and Privileges or Immunities Clauses, respectively. The book follows a clear path laid out in its Introduction. Part One walks the reader through Wurman’s originalist takes on these respective clauses, informed by antebellum law and prominent legal writings available prior to the amendment’s drafting. Part Two lays out the historical context that provided the impetus for the drafting of the amendment, while Part Three applies Wurman’s interpretations to several past Supreme Court decisions to see how they might play out under his reading of the clauses. In the course of his assessments, Wurman provides a good overview of debates within prominent originalist scholarship. Keeping his take on the amendment firmly within the bounds of originalism, Wurman seeks a third way between a very constraining originalism and what he sees as the unrestrained discretion of the Supreme Court throughout much of the last several decades. Overall, he views these three key clauses as “sufficiently capacious to apply to new and important contexts, but not so capacious as to be open-ended invitations to judges to import their own extratextual values into the constitution” (p. 4).
Eschewing heavy reliance on the legislative history of the amendment’s journey through Congress, Wurman turns instead to pre-American Revolution English