Teaching about Due Process of Law
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Fundamental constitutional and legal principles are central to
effective and powerful instruction in the K-12 social studies
curriculum. To become competent citizens, students need to develop a
rich understanding of the principles on which their society and
government rest. Few principles are as important in the social
studies curriculum as due process of law. This digest traces
the history and development of due process of law, contrasts
procedural and substantive due process, and highlights World Wide Web
resources helpful in teaching and learning about due process of law.
ORIGINS OF DUE PROCESS OF LAW
The idea of due process of law -- that the government cannot
deprive people of life, liberty, or property without previously
established legal procedures equally and justly applied to all -- is
at least as old as the Magna Carta (1215), when King John of England
was forced to promise, among other things, that "No free man shall be
taken or imprisoned or disseised [deprived], outlawed, banished, or in
any way destroyed, nor will we proceed against him, except by the
lawful judgment of his peers or by the law of the land" (Orth 2003,
7). Due process was an important feature of many colonial charters in
British North America and in statutes such as the 1641 Massachusetts
Body of Liberties (Quigley and Bahmueller 1991, 619). For most of
human history, however, the arbitrary and capricious judgments of
rulers, not the rule of law, reigned supreme.
Although the U.S. Constitution of 1787 does not mention
the words "due process of law" or "law of the land," several
provisions of the original Constitution imply due process of
law, such as the provisions prohibiting ex post facto laws,
bills of attainder, and interference with contracts, as well
as those guaranteeing trial by jury, habeas corpus, and
equal status for all citizens of the states (Maddex 2002,
145). The phrase "due process of law," however, does appear
in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution. Both due process clauses protect people from
the arbitrary use of government power to deny an individual
life, liberty, or property; the Fifth Amendment provision
protects people from abuse by the national government while
the Fourteenth Amendment clause is a prohibition on state
governments.
PROCEDURAL AND SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS
How do the due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments protect people from the arbitrary use of government power?
The United States Supreme Court has interpreted these clauses in two
distinct ways: (1) procedural due process and (2) substantive due
process.
Procedural due process means that if the government is to deny
people life, liberty, or property, it must follow fair and previously
established legal procedures in criminal and civil cases. Civil
actions, for example, often involve large property losses and
therefore invoke the protections of procedural due process (Maddex
2002, 146). Public school students have a proprietary interest in
attending school and must be given some procedural protections if they
are to be expelled from school (West and Schamel 1991). If a state
accuses an individual of a crime, the accused has certain procedural
due process rights such as those guaranteed by the Fourth, Fifth,
Sixth, and Eighth Amendments to the Constitution (Kaplan 1997, 29-30;
Patrick 2001, 111).
Substantive due process has little to do with procedural fairness;
rather, the Supreme Court has ruled that actions of the national and
state governments that infringe upon certain fundamental rights,
regardless of the procedures used in doing so, will be exposed to
exacting judicial scrutiny and more often than not be found in
violation of the Constitution.
The Supreme Court began using the substantive component of the
Fourteenth Amendment's due process clause in the 1890's to invalidate
numerous state laws that interfered with what the Court considered
fundamental economic liberties ( economic substantive due process ).
The Court struck down, for example, a New York law that barred bakers
from working more than ten hours per day or sixty hours per week.
Although the state had used fair procedures in passing and
implementing the law, the substance or effect of the law violated
(according to the Supreme Court in Lochner v. New York (1905)) a
fundamental liberty -- the right of consenting individuals to make
contracts freely.
In 1937, the Supreme Court began overturning its economic
substantive due process decisions and started giving substantive
protection to other categories of rights via the Fourteenth
Amendment's due process clause. Since Palko v. Connecticut (1937), the
Court has employed this two-pronged test to guide its use of
substantive due process to protect the individual's fundamental rights
(Patrick 2003, 142): (1) Is the right deeply rooted in the history
and tradition of our nation? (2) Is the right implicit in the concept
of ordered liberty? According to these standards, if the substance,
meaning, or effect of a law or action of a government infringes upon a
fundamental right to liberty, then the state must show that its
infringements are necessary to achieve some compelling governmental
interest (Patrick 2003, 148-149). Furthermore, Justice Harlan Fiske
Stone, in a footnote to the Court's opinion in a 1938 case (United
States v. Carolene Products Co.), stated that strict judicial scrutiny
could be used in cases involving (1) certain "preferred freedoms" in
the Bill of Rights, (2) the rights of "discrete and insular
minorities" and (3) actions of the government that tend to "seriously
curtail the operation of those political processes ordinarily relied
upon to protect minorities." Thus, the Court would use substantive due
process to protect minority rights against infringement by majority
rule (Patrick 2003, 132-133).
The Court has used substantive due process to consider whether or
not specific provisions of the Bill of Rights ought to be
"incorporated" through the Fourteenth Amendment's due process clause
and protected against infringement by the state governments. To date,
the Court has rejected former Justice Hugo L. Black's argument for
total incorporation of the Bill of Rights and has opted to incorporate
only fundamental rights on a case-by-case basis, a process known as
"selective incorporation."Most of the rights in the Bill of Rights,
however, have been incorporated and therefore nationalized. Only the
Second, Third, and Seventh Amendments and parts of the Fifth and
Eighth Amendments have yet to be incorporated and applied against the
states.
Due process of law has become a defining feature of American
constitutionalism and an inherent part of justice in the United
States. Both procedural and substantive due process have been used to
place constitutional limits on the powers of government to protect the
rights of individuals against infringement by either the federal
government or the fifty state governments (Patrick 2001, 111). Thus,
due process of law, both procedural and substantive, is foundational
to understanding the U.S. system of government. Teaching and learning
about due process of law deserves a prominent place in the K-12 social
studies curriculum, particularly in history, government, and civics
classes.
WORLD WIDE WEB RESOURCES FOR TEACHING ABOUT DUE PROCESS
See the following Web sites for ideas and information about due
process of law.
U.S. Constitution Online. A comprehensive Web site about all
aspects of the United States Constitution; students and teachers will
find detailed information about the history and interpretation of the
due process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. <http://www.usconstitution.net/index.html
>
FindLaw. Although designed for use by legal professionals, this
Web site may be used by students or teachers to obtain detailed
information about the Supreme Court's interpretation of the due
process clauses of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United
States Constitution. <http://www.findlaw.com/
>
The Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth Amendment. This Web site is
an excellent resource for teachers and students who want to learn more
about incorporation of the Bill of Rights. The site contains an
extensive analysis of the incorporation doctrine by a leading legal
theorist, Akhil Reed Amar of Yale Law School. <
http://www.saf.org/LawReviews/Amar1.html >
REFERENCES AND ERIC RESOURCES
Kaplan, Howard. "Rights of the Accused. Teaching Strategy." UPDATE
ON LAW-RELATED EDUCATION 21 (Spring 1997): 29-30. EJ 541 955.
Maddex, Robert L. THE U.S. CONSTITUTION A TO Z. Washington, D.C.:
CQ Press, 2002. Orth, John V. DUE PROCESS OF LAW: A BRIEF HISTORY.
Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 2003.
Osborn, Elizabeth. "Meghan Rene, et al., v. Dr. Suellen Reed, et
al. Due Process. Lesson Plans for Secondary School Teachers on the
Constitutional Requirement of Due Process of Law."
COURTS IN THE CLASSROOM: CURRICULUM CONCEPTS AND OTHER INFORMATION
ON INDIANA COURTS FOR THE K-12 EDUCATOR. Indianapolis, IN: Indiana
Supreme Court, 2002. ED 470 345.
Patrick, John J. THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES: A STUDENT
COMPANION. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.
Patrick, John J. THE BILL OF RIGHTS: A HISTORY IN DOCUMENTS. New
York: Oxford University Press, 2003.
Quigley, Charles N. and Charles Bahmueller. CIVITAS: A FRAMEWORK
FOR CIVIC EDUCATION. Calabasas, CA: Center for Civic Education, 1991.
ED 340 654.
Stevens, Richard G. "Due Process of Law and Due Regard for the
Constitution." TEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE 13 (Fall 1985): 25-35. EJ
330 538.
West, Jean, and Wynell Burroughs Schamel. "Due Process and Student
Rights: Syllabus of the Goss v. Lopez Decision." SOCIAL EDUCATION 55
(March 1991): 161-163. EJ 430 533.
ERIC Identifier: ED482212 Publication Date: 2003-12-00
Author: Vontz, Thomas S. Source: ERIC Clearinghouse for Social
Studies/Social Science Education
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