Lucidly written, and well researched, 'In Our Defense' clarifies and humanizes the Bill of Rights for the layman and the civics researcher alike. With interesting and engaging judicial proceedings, delving into protections afforded by this addition to the US Constitution, Alderman and Kennedy paint a vivid picture of a complex, and at times thorny, social fabric woven by deeply contemplated ideas of the founding fathers written into law. A sense that some of these ideas, especially the second, of the ten amendments collectively called the Bill of Rights, may be outdated is inescapable...particularly since recent judicial decisions have hardened implementation of this amendment, leading to increased concern over security in an excessively armed society. Is it really practical to maintain ideas, of more than two centuries in the past, rigid and unchanging in a dynamic and progressive society? This work provides an excellent introduction to such necessary debate.