Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Housing Law Handbook

Housing Law Handbook

Price: £85.00

Planning Law:
A Practitioner's Handbook
2nd ed




 William Webster, Robert Weatherley


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


Judicial Cooperation in Commercial Litigation 3rd ed (The British Cross-Border Financial Centre World)



 Ian Kawaley, David Doyle, Shade Subair Williams


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


Pardons: Discretionary Mercy and the Rule of Law in Britain and America, 1066-2026


ISBN13: 9781047755214
To be Published: October 2026
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £50.00





Pardons is an unprecedented history of the pardon power, chronicling how British monarchs and American presidents have wielded clemency to afford mercy, reconcile societies, and exert executive supremacy. The book traces the pardon power from its origins as an attribute of absolute monarchy to its adoption by the American Framers as one of the few enumerated powers of the president of the United States. It tells the stories, human and political, of all forty-five presidents who have wielded the pardon power and of those they pardoned. The book argues that the increasing abuse of presidential clemency and the effective elimination of impeachment and criminal prosecution as constraints on presidential misconduct have made the pardon power a threat to the rule of law. To address this growing danger, Pardons calls for presidential pardon powers to be eliminated or transferred to Congress by constitutional amendment.

Subjects:
Legal History
Contents:
Introduction
1. Pardons and kingship in Britain from 1066 to the 1788
2. Pardons in the British North American Colonies, 1607–1775
3. Pardons in America in the revolutionary period 1775–787
4. The founders' pardon power
5. Presidential pardons from George Washington James Buchanan, 1789–1861
6. Pardons and amnesties during the civil war – Lincoln's clemency, 1861–1865
7. Pardons and amnesties during reconstruction, Part I. The Presidency of Andrew Johnson:
8. Pardons and amnesties during reconstruction, Part II. The presidencies of Ulysses Grant and Rutherford B. Hayes (1869–1881):
9. Pardons from the end of reconstruction to the eve of World War I: James Garfield through William Howard Taft
10. Pardons in the era of the administrative state and global war: Woodrow Wilson through Lyndon Johnson
11. The pardon process begins to wither: Nixon, Ford, and Carter (1968–1980)
12. Reagan to Obama (1981–2017) – The near-death and brief, controversial resurrection of the pardon power as a tool of federal criminal justice reform
13. Pardons as tools of political warfare: Donald Trump's first term
14. The pardons of Joe Biden and Trump's second term
15. The law of pardons: general rules
16. The law of pardons: congress and the pardon power
17. The law of pardons: the imagined power of self-pardon
18. Executive discretion and the rule of law: pardons, presidential immunity and impeachment
19. The constitution should be amended to abolish or modify the presidential pardon power.