Saturday, June 21, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • The Minnesota Supreme Court Historical Society is hosting a one-hour CLE panel, A Dive Into Unitary Executive Theory: Presidential Powers and Limitations, on June 24 from 3-4 CDT in person at the Minnesota Judicial Center.  The panelists are Christine Chabot, Marquette University Law School; Heidi Kitrosser, Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law; and Nick Bednar, University of Minnesota Law School
  • UC Irvine School of Humanities on its alumna, Stanford Law's Bernadette Meyler 
  • Modern Criminal Law Review had a symposium on Chloë Kennedy’s Inducing Intimacy: Deception, Consent and the Law (Cambridge University Press, 2024).  A podcast version is here.
  • ICYMI:  How Much Money Do Historians Make From Their Writing? (Contingent Magazine).  Kate Hampton on a Montana antidiscrimination case from 1881 (Daily Montana).  Manisha Sinha on Lincoln and the abolitionists (Unpopulist). John Yoo on Putting the Executive in "Unitary Executive" (Law & Liberty).  St. Louis's Old Courthouse (Ladue News).

 Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers. 

Friday, June 20, 2025

Grossman and Friedman on History, Tradition and Abortion

The second of today’s HAT posts is Joanna L. Grossman, SMU-Dedman School of Law, and Lawrence M. Friedman, Stanford Law School, The Quick and the Dead: The Uses and Misuses of History in Abortion Jurisprudence, which appears in the Women’s Rights Law Reporter:

On June 24, 2022, a solid conservative majority of justices on the United States Supreme Court decided that the time had come to overrule Roe v. Wade, and it did so in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization. The opinion in Roe, according to the majority in Dobbs, “was egregiously wrong from the start.” And the time had come to get rid of it once and for all. There was no constitutional right to an abortion, according to the majority. In the Court’s words, “the authority to regulate abortion must be returned to the people and their elected representatives.”  

Dobbs is and will remain controversial. Abortion is clearly a major issue, politically speaking, with strong passions on both sides. Roe v. Wade itself was also controversial from the very beginning. Abortion had been a contested matter before that decision; and Roe itself was never accepted by a large minority of Americans, particularly in the South. Both sides in the abortion controversy have appealed to the historical record. The Dobbs majority opinion relies on the criminalization of abortion in the second half of the nineteenth century to conclude that abortion cannot be recognized as a fundamental right under the Fourteenth Amendment. In this article, we want to re-examine that history. 

It would be naïve to think that historical considerations made a crucial difference in the Dobbs decision (despite what the opinion claims); or that it will be decisive in a related dispute over the Comstock Act and the legality of abortion pills. But historical rhetoric has been a prominent tool in the abortion dispute; and this makes it worthwhile to pick apart the historical arguments. Yet this is not only, or primarily, a study in legal history. It is a study of the shape and meaning of the abortion controversy over time. It is a study of how the social context molded that controversy, in the past, and in the present. The goal is to broaden our understanding, first, of the abortion issue, and beyond that, how politics, religion, ideology, and other factors bear on the question of unborn life. 

The aim is objectivity—if that is possible. We will first consider the particular ways in which history was deemed relevant to the majority’s ruling in Dobbs and note the historical claims that are contested or even obviously wrong. Then, we will get to the heart of the article, in which we examine the history of abortion law and policy in social context. This analysis lays bare the absurdity of grounding constitutional rights in “history,” when laws and policies are plucked from their social context and dropped into a world that would have been unrecognizable to those who lived at the relevant time in history.

Abortion is, as before, a controversial issue. History, as we said, cannot convince either side that their view is right and the other view wrong. What it can do is shine the light of scholarship on the history of this controversy, with as much rigor as the subject allows. When we do this, the historical arguments in the Dobbs opinion seem more and more irrelevant. Those arguments, we have argued, were based on a profound misreading of the social context in which the abortion issue in Victorian times played out. Today, we live in a very different world. The terms of the debate in the nineteenth century are not the terms of today. They are in fact, as we tried to show in this article, essentially obsolete. 

--Dan Ernst 

Blocher and Siegel on History, Tradition and Guns

It’s “history and tradition” (HAT) Friday.  Our first post is Joseph Blocher, Duke University School of Law, and Reva Siegel, Yale Law School, The Ambitions of History and Tradition in and Beyond the Second Amendment, which is forthcoming in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review:

This Article examines the ambitions of history-and-tradition review in and beyond the Second Amendment. In Bruen and Rahimi the Roberts Court rejected means-end review in favor of a historical-analogical approach, claiming to constrain the exercise of judicial discretion, and thus to promote the democratic decisions of the founders. But our examination of these cases shows that the Court has created new opportunities for judges to advance their values in considerably less transparent ways. We identify contexts in which Second Amendment doctrine enables judicial discretion, key among them that it allows judges to reason about gun rights and regulation at disparate levels of generality, extending rights protection to modern guns while requiring gun laws to resemble ancient analogues. When applied in this asymmetric fashion, the historical approach deregulates in ways that are neither acknowledged nor justified. An eight-member majority objected to this strategy in Rahimi and voted to uphold a federal gun law. Yet numerous Justices wrote separately to limit Rahimi’s reach—and, a year later, to suggest that the Court should take a case involving an assault-weapons ban to clarify the method set forth in its earlier cases.

Our close reading of the history-and-tradition (HAT) cases shows that there is a persistent gap between what the Court says and does—between the judicial constraint the Roberts Court promises and the actual decisions it delivers. Understanding this dynamic in the Second Amendment cases helps us recognize it in the First Amendment and Substantive Due Process cases as well.

We can better appreciate the Court’s reasoning in extending HAT review if we excavate the arguments advanced in the decade between Heller and Bruen for substituting the HAT approach for means-ends review. This retrospective shows us that HAT approaches exhibit the very problems imputed to means-ends review: HAT review is not grounded in original understanding and employs shifts in generality to provide judges discretion to enforce value-based understandings. We can see this dynamic unfolding inside and outside the Second Amendment context.

HAT decisions pose distinctive threats to democracy. First, Bruen has implemented HAT through judicial review with a strong presumption of unconstitutionality, a counter-majoritarian practice lacking precedent at the founding. Second, HAT review is not transparent, obscuring reasons for judicial decisions from the people and thus obstructing democratic dialogue. Third, the HAT framework encourages judges to decide the constitutionality of public safety laws on grounds that ignore the public’s most urgent reasons for enacting the laws.

This reading of the Court’s Second Amendment cases indicates that the push to adopt HAT approaches in First Amendment, Due Process, and other areas of constitutional law is likely to compound the problems it is supposed to solve, while insulating the Court’s control of the Constitution from the public governed by it. 
--Dan Ernst

Thursday, June 19, 2025

US History through Its Assassinations

Mark Jones, professor emeritus of criminal justice and criminology, East Carolina University, has published A History of the United States through High-Profile Assassinations (Cognella):

A History of the United States through High-Profile Assassinations
presents a unique perspective on American history, framing the narrative through a sequence of notable assassinations and attempted assassinations. This approach offers a novel lens through which to examine historical continuity and change. The text emphasizes the broader social, political, and historical contexts revealed by these violent acts, regardless of whether the perpetrators aimed to make a political statement.

The book explores the evolution of the term "assassination," its historical roots, and its impact on social and political change globally and within the United States. It delves into typologies of assassins, uses various historical episodes to discuss broader issues, and includes less explored assassination attempts alongside well-known events. Additionally, the book pays attention to the narratives often relegated to the sidelines of history, reflecting on the experiences of ethnic minorities and women.

A History of the United States through High-Profile Assassinations serves as a compelling primary or supplemental text for courses in American history, criminal justice, and political science. It provides an innovative approach to learning that encourages students to connect individual events with larger national and international trends.
--Dan Ernst

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Forum on Wang's "Making of Felony Procedure"

[We have word from the Modern Criminal Law Review of From Treason to Trump: Felony’s Medieval Origins and Modern Resilience, a forum on Elise Wang's Making of Felony Procedure in Middle English Literature.  DRE]

In The Making of Felony Procedure in Middle English Literature (Oxford 2024), Elise Wang explores the medieval origins and surprising modern resilience of “felony” in contemporary criminal law. Since its appearance as the ur-crime of Anglo-Saxon proto-criminal law, commentators, historians, and judges have waxed poetic about the radically exclusive evil attached to those who are branded, “attainted,” and just plain despised “with words of felony.”

The following passage from Pollock & Maitland’s classic history of medieval English law gives a nice flavor:

When the adjective felon first appears it seems to mean cruel, fierce, wicked, base. Occasionally we may hear in it a note of admiration, for fierceness may shade off into laudable courage; but in general it is as bad a word as you can give to man or thing, and it will stand equally well for many kinds of badness, for ferocity, cowardice, craft.
That’s memorably harsh, even for medieval law. More startling yet, talk of “felony” and “felons” survives to this day. Courts continue to quote the passage above to give their modern audience a flavor of what felony means today. In public discourse, the “branding” of a criminal defendant as a “felon”–as opposed to a mere “convict”–still appears as definitive evidence of that person’s (more or less permanent and total) exclusion from the political community, i.e., a type of civil death or outlawry (incl. disenfranchisement, deportation, and ineligibility for jobs, benefits, or privileges).

How can this be? What did felony mean in medieval law and literature? What does (and should?) it mean today? Does felony have a place in modern criminal law discourse and practice?

In preparation for this Forum, MCLR+ hosted a book panel, live streamed on our YouTube channel, on January 17, 2025. The video of that event is available here; the audio is accessible here, or on any of the usual podcast outlets (Spotify, Apple, etc.). For additional materials, please consult MCLR+ Resources (“Felony”).

To stay informed about upcoming MCLR+ events, publications, and projects, please sign up for the MCLR+ mailing list and check the MCLR+ website; to receive notifications about new video content, subscribe to our YouTube channel.

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Primus's "Oldest Constitutional Question"

Richard Primus, University of Michigan Law School, has published The Oldest Constitutional Question: Enumeration and Federal Power (Harvard University Press):

Every law student learns that the federal government is constrained to act only according to its enumerated powers, meaning that Congress can do what the Constitution expressly authorizes it to and nothing more. Yet Richard Primus contends that this longstanding orthodoxy—allegedly required by the text of the Constitution, the Framers’ vision, and the logic of federalism—is fundamentally flawed.

Through careful analysis of constitutional text and history, and of the structure of American federalism, The Oldest Constitutional Question builds a powerful argument for broad congressional authority. In particular, Primus shows that the primary function of enumeration is to rule listed powers in, not to rule other powers out. The Framers were more worried that the federal government might be fragile and anemic than that it would be overwhelmingly strong. Enumerating congressional powers is thus best understood as a way of ensuring that the federal legislature has an incontestable warrant to exercise the powers specified there, not as an exhaustive description of all that Congress can do.

In practice, the enumeration of powers does little to limit Congress. But most constitutional lawyers—including many Supreme Court justices—think this means something has gone wrong, such that the courts must aggressively strike down federal laws exceeding Congress’s enumerated powers. Primus’s meticulous examination explodes the prevailing view, revealing its underlying errors. The constitutional system does place limits on Congress, and crucially so, but the enumeration of powers is not, and never has been, a sensible means for creating and enforcing those limits

Michigan Law's interview of Professor Primus about his book is here

 --Dan Ernst

Dudziak's "Cold War Civil Rights"

Congratulations to LHB Founder Mary Dudziak on the publication of a new edition of her landmark book, Cold War Civil Rights (Princeton University Press), with a new preface in which Professor Dudziak discusses new ways of thinking about the Cold war and its affect on civil rights and takes her story to the recent past and the global Black Lives Matter movement.

--Dan Ernst

Monday, June 16, 2025

Smith Student Writing Prize in California Legal History

[We are moving up this previously posted call for submissions for this student writing prize because the due date is now July 15.  DRE]

The California Supreme Court Historical Society (CSCHS) encourages all students working on California legal history (NOT just the history of California courts) to apply for the Selma Moidel Smith Student Writing Competition in California Legal History. Papers may include elements of digital humanities and may also be co-authored. This is a GREAT WAY to get attention for your hard work!

$5,000 first-place, $2,500 second-place, and $1,000 third-place prizes will be awarded to the best papers on California state or colonial history, broadly considered. Recent winners include a study of the death penalty in California, the evolution of California land law, the desegregation of Stanford Law School, and disability law and the campaign for independent living. as well as a jointly authored paper on Chinese adoption practices and their role in immigration decisions after the Chinese Exclusion Act.

We accept papers of at least 7,500 and not more than 15,000 words, including notes and other
explanatory matter. The competition is open to students and recent graduates in history and/or law, provided that they did not have full-time academic employment at the time the paper was written. The paper should also be unpublished; prize winners will likely receive an offer to publish in California Legal History, CSCHS’s journal.

Papers may be self-nominated or sent in by a professor or supervisor. To ensure anonymity, the author’s name should appear only on a separate cover page, along with the author’s mailing address, telephone number, email address, and the name of their school.

Submissions are due by [July 15], 2025 and should be sent to [email protected] with the subject line “Smith Prize.” The winners will be announced in July 2025, and an award ceremony (likely over Zoom) will be held in August or September.

For the Prize Committee: Sarah Barringer Gordon, Laura Kalman, Stuart Banner

Saturday, June 14, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Notre Dame Law’s notice of its two prize winners at the recent annual meeting of the Supreme Court Historical Society, Barry Cushman and Dennis Wieboldt.   
  • Harvard Law's notice of Kenneth W. Mack's election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (Harvard Law Today).
  • The U.S. Department of Justice, Then & Now: Barbara McQuade, Michigan Law and a former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan, in conversation with John Q. Barrett at the Robert H. Jackson Center. 
  • If, like me, you teach the rise of the residential subdivision, you might want to check out this post by the Library of Congress's Geography and Maps Division.  DRE 
  • ICYMI: "The Constitution—Not Trump—Demands Allegiance" says Christian Fritz (Albuquerque Journal) (link fixed). The Cato Institute says history teaches that fighting tyranny requires mobilizing the people as well as the courts (Cato).  A history of the Antiquities Act in 1906 (Wilderness Society).
  Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers. 

Friday, June 13, 2025

Poldnikov on Dialogical Narrative in Comparative Legal History

Dmitry Poldnikov, MGIMO University, Moscow, has posted Dialogical Narrative in Comparative Legal History:

As a well-established academic discipline, legal history offers a wide range of methodological tools. Many among them are rooted in the classical paradigm and face the challenge of the "postclassical turn" in humanities. This paper advocates a dialogical approach for legal history, asserting that profound understanding arises from an active "communication" with past legal systems through historians posing meaningful questions to historical documents, a concept drawing from comparative law. It first examines legal history's "vocation," touching upon Savigny's "Volksgeist" and the historicism-universalism debate, before critiquing the limitations of isolated traditional approaches like legal positivism, natural law theory, and sociological jurisprudence, which risk oversimplification or anachronism. As a constructive alternative, the paper advocates for a communicative, narrative-based approach, viewing legal history as a historian-constructed narrative in line with post-classical legal thought. A methodological framework for this dialogical and comparative legal history-encompassing descriptive reconstruction, causal explanation, and critical evaluation-is proposed. This framework is then vividly applied to a detailed comparative analysis of a single casus: the collision of carts from the Digest (D. 9.2.52.2). The paper examines how Roman law, English common law, Romano-canonical ius commune, Sharia (Fiqh), and Imperial Chinese law might have uniquely approached this problem. This micro-historical comparison reveals that the distinct style and substance of these legal traditions are fundamentally shaped by the specific questions they pose and the methods they employ for resolution. The paper concludes by affirming that such a sustained, questioning dialogue with historical legal sources is indispensable for constructing meaningful narratives that illuminate both the particularity of past legal systems and their enduring relevance to contemporary legal understanding. 

--Dan Ernst 

Thursday, June 12, 2025

Bugaric on Fulgosius on Just War

Max Kuhelj Bugaric, a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Government and a student in the Law School at Harvard University, has posted Raphael Fulgosius on Just War: Papal Adjudication of Conflicts and War as Judgment.  The paper was awarded the 2025 Irving Oberman Memorial Award in Legal History of the Harvard Law School. 

While Raphael Fulgosius (1367–1427) does advance a seemingly revolutionary notion—that in certain cases, the outcome of a war is itself a just verdict—it must be read in light of the overall framework he develops. But in what has been written on this topic, the emphasis rests almost entirely on his argument about the impossibility of judging the different sides’ claims to justice in a formal bellum. This paper attempts to correct the historical record and offer a more fully contextual interpretation of his claims. Fulgosius was willing to set aside the rigid theory of the just war framework and instead label conflicts between Christians “dissensions” (dissensiones) precisely in order to preserve the diplomatic power of the papacy. But the conclusion Fulgosius reaches in effect allows for an even stronger statement of the unilateral rights of war, as it is the pope himself who acts as judge in such disputes. There can be no appeal to his sentence, which also resolves the problem of potential ambiguity and doubt. Even if he thought papal adjudicative power should not be completely unconstrained in such scenarios, he likely would have wanted to preserve the general prerogative, motivated at least in part by the desire to rein in the constant warfare that characterized the Italian city-states in this period.

--Dan Ernst 

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Tsai and Levinson on Caste

Robert L. Tsai, Boston University School of Law, and Sanford Levinson, University of Texas Law School, have posted Under What Circumstances is “Caste” Likely to Be a Useful Analytic Concept (and Should We Care)?:

There is growing interest among egalitarians to embrace "caste" to analyze forms of inequality in the United States. In this essay, we offer a few reservations about this trend. First, we note some general limits to arguments by analogy. Second, we point to some historical and legal differences between the caste system in India and the system of American slavery and segregration that followed. Third, if caste analysis were to take hold in American law, many more cultural practices (and perhaps even the value of pluralism itself) would need to be reconsidered. Fourth, there is some risk that the anti-caste project could lead to a proliferation of groups and conditions problematically characterized as "backward," and thereby paradoxically fixing social status in the political imagination. Relatedly, caste analysis in the law might obscure subtleties in material inequality. Fifth, even when caste is used purely as a trope for political mobilization, we note concerns of intelligibility and persuasiveness that ought to be taken into account. 

--Dan Ernst 

Tuesday, June 10, 2025

Boyd's "Freedom Enterprise"

Kendra D. Boyd, Rutgers University, has published Freedom Enterprise: Black Entrepreneurship and Racial Capitalism in Detroit (University of Pennsylvania Press):

The Great Migration saw more than six million African Americans leave the US South between 1910 and 1970. Though the experiences of migrant laborers are well-known, countless African Americans also left the South to pursue entrepreneurial opportunities and viewed business as key to Black liberation. Detroit’s status as a mecca for Black entrepreneurship illuminates this overlooked aspect of the Great Migration story. In Freedom Enterprise, Kendra D. Boyd uses “migrant entrepreneurship” as a lens through which to understand the entwined histories of Black-owned business, racial capitalism, and urban space.

Freedom Enterprise
follows Black Southerners’ journeys to Detroit during the initial wave of migration in the 1910s and 1920s, through their efforts to build a prosperous Black business community in the 1930s and 1940s, to the destruction of that community through urban renewal projects and freeway construction in the 1950s and 1960s. Combining business and social history methods to analyze an eclectic archive, Boyd chronicles migrant entrepreneurs’ experiences, highlighting tales of racial and economic violence, Black women’s business organizing, illegal business, communist entrepreneurs, and cooperative economics.

Boyd uses the framework of racial capitalism to examine migrant entrepreneurs’ experiences in twentieth-century America. In the Jim Crow South, African Americans worried about white mobs taking away their property, wealth, and lives. Though they sought refuge in Detroit, migrant entrepreneurs subsequently faced the loss of their livelihoods and the businesses they had spent decades building to the bulldozers of state-sponsored urban redevelopment initiatives. Southern migrants’ “freedom enterprise”—their undertaking of attaining freedom through business—was curtailed by the reality of operating within the confines of US racial capitalism.

In tracing Black entrepreneurs across the Great Migration, Freedom Enterprise provides important insights into African Americans’ activism for racial and economic justice and continued racialized wealth disparities.

--Dan Ernst 

Monday, June 9, 2025

Toler on Privileges, Immunities and Freemanship

Lorianne Updike Toler, Northern Illinois University College of Law, visiting at YLS, has posted Freemanship:

American citizenship, scholars contend, is informed by British subjectship as found in Calvin's Case. Current debates over birthright citizenship, for instance, revolve around this limited legal concept. The problem with this state of play is that British subjectship provided only part-and a small one at that-of citizenship at the Framing.

The major part sounded in freemanship, a local legal status reserved for non-vassal, nonenslaved men who took an oath of loyalty, defended the locality with their arms, and contributed to its coffers in exchange for the privileges and immunities reserved for town members. Such freeman were given the "freedom of the city." The concept was of ancient date, hearkening back to Greco-Roman times, evolved in medieval England as reflected in the Magna Carta, and arrived in the New World via colonial charters, which recognized freemen as those who could serve in and vote on colonial leadership. When the colonies created American citizenship in the Articles of Confederation, colonial freemen were rendered citizens. The only relic of subjectship that survived the onset of American citizenship was that natural born subjects if free were entitled to take the oath and become freemen when they came of age, but so too could aliens through naturalization. It was freemanship, not necessarily subjects, which became citizens of the new republic. 

Freemanship as the true antecedent to citizenship deepens our understanding of privileges & immunities as appurtenant to ancient freemanship and supports and delimits the general law theory of the Fourteenth Amendment to those privileges and immunities. 

--Dan Ernst 

Saturday, June 7, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Congratulations to Michael Schoeppner, University of Maine at Farmington, upon his receipt of an American Council of Learned Societies fellowship for his proposed book, “‘Living Illegally,’ which tells the stories of free Black people whose illicit migrations belie the oft-told story of America’s open borders in the era before the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882" (UMF). 
  • Congratulations to Adelina Miceli, this year’s recipient of the University of Connecticut Law School’s Distinguished Alumni Professor Kent Newmyer Award in American Legal History, “established in honor of Kent Newmyer to recognize a student who demonstrates excellence in the study of American legal history.”  
  •  A wide-ranging interview of Seth Barrett Tillman (Ami).
  • On June 21 at 2 pm, the Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site will host Megan Rhodes Victor, Queens College, who will present “‘We’ll Be Free’: Molly Houses, Community, & Homosexuality in the 18th C. English Colonial World.”  The event is free and open to the public (New York Almanack).
  • The Brennan Center has announced its Steven M. Polan Fellows in Constitutional Law and History for  2025–2026: Michele Goodwin, Brian Highsmith, Alan Jenkins, Joy Milligan, Bertrall Ross, and Robinson Woodward-Burns.  
  • Over at LPE Blog, a symposium is underway on Sandeep Vaheesan’s Democracy in Power: A History of Electrification in the United States
  • The American Political Science Association's advice to members those traveling between the United States and Canada for its annual meeting in Vancouver in September.  (ASLH 2026 is set to meet in Alberta.)
  • His Honour Peter Collier, KC, reviews The Legal History of the Church of England, edited by Norman Doe and Stephen Coleman (Church Times). 
  • ICYMI: Scott Bomboy on Four Cases When the Writ of Habeas Corpus Was Suspended  (NCC).  Rachel Barkow on the history of presidential pardons (NPR). A new website illuminates the history of Indigenous enslavement in New England (R.I. PBS). Victoria Sutton on "the other slavery," with a lovely shout out to her teacher James May (NNO).  An awkward moment at the Supreme Court Historical Society (WaPo).

 Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers. 

Friday, June 6, 2025

Halbhuber on the State-Law Origins of Appellate Review

Fred Halbhuber, a recent graduate of the Yale Law School, has posted The State-Law Origins of the Appellate Review Model:

Modern administrative law owes much to the appellate model of judicial review. Adherence to this model dictates what courts review (the administrative record), what questions courts decide for themselves (questions of law), and what questions courts defer on (questions of fact). Current literature traces the origins of this “foundational” approach to a series of early-twentieth-century Supreme Court decisions re-interpreting the federal injunctive power. But this account is incomplete. This Article shows that the true origins of the appellate review model lie not in federal equity practice, but in state common law decisions. Over the course of the nineteenth century, judicial review on the common law writ of certiorari—the primary instrument of judicial review in the states—gradually shed its English-law-inspired focus on “jurisdictional” error. Through this selective departure from English precedent, certiorari came to approximate appellate review: confined to the record, de novo on questions of law, and deferential on questions of fact.

By documenting the emergence of this earlier, certiorari-based appellate review model, this Article offers an answer to an enduring mystery at the heart of federal administrative law: where did the Supreme Court get the appellate review model from? This Article argues that, in the early twentieth century, the Court lifted the model from state certiorari practice. In so doing, the Court certiorari-ized the federal injunction. The implications for our understanding of modern judicial review are several, but this Article focuses on one particularly salient issue: the availability of universal relief. The debate on universal relief has thus far focused almost exclusively on federal equity practice. But, as this Article shows, the modern federal injunction has much more in common with state certiorari practice than with nineteenth-century federal equity practice. Looking to state certiorari practice—where courts routinely “set aside,” “annulled,” “vacated,” and “suspended” administrative action universally—offers new support for universal relief.

After tracing the state-law origins of the appellate review model, this Article turns to the debate over the meaning of “set aside” in § 706 of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). Commentators and judges disagree on whether the APA’s “set aside” language empowers federal courts to vacate agency action universally, or only to ignore the agency action as to the plaintiffs in a particular case. This Article sheds new light on the original meaning of this vague language by demonstrating that, when Congress first introduced the “set aside” term into federal law via the Hepburn Act of 1906, it was transplanting the language from earlier state codes. By documenting how nineteenth-century state statutes used the “set aside” language to describe judicial review, this Article strengthens the case that “set aside” in § 706 is synonymous with “vacate."

--Dan Ernst 

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Michigan Law Review's Book Review Issue

The annual book review issue of the Michigan Law Review includes several essays on works of legal history, in addition to Reva Siegel’s historically informed foreword, which which we’ve previously notedErwin Chemerinsky reviews David Pozen’s Constitution of the War on Drugs, Andrew Lanham reviews Aziz Rana’s Constitutional Bind, Marin Levy reviews Robert Post’s Taft Court, and William Novak reviews Jack Balkin’s Memory and Authority.

--Dan Ernst 

Judge William Bryant, the "Soul of the Court"

[We have the following announcement from the Historical Society of the District of Columbia Circuit and the Supreme Court Historical Society.  DRE]

On June 18, 2025 at noon, please join the Supreme Court Historical Society and the Historical Society for the District of Columbia Circuit for a Juneteenth conversation about the new biography of Judge William Benson Bryant, Soul of the Court: The Trailblazing Life of Judge William Benson Bryant Sr, by Tonya Bolden.  The panel consists of Roger A. Fairfax, Dean of Howard University School of Law, William B. Schultz, partner at Zuckerman Spaeder who both clerked for Judge Bryant and took his oral history, and Michelle Coles, a Howard Law School graduate, former DOJ attorney, and now author.

William B. Bryant served on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia beginning in 1965, when he was appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson, until his death in 2005. He was Chief Judge from 1977 to 1981.  Prior to being appointed to the federal bench, Judge Bryant graduated at the top of his law school class at Howard University School of Law, after the war became one of the first black prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, and then became a prominent criminal defense lawyer.  He litigated pro bono the landmark case of Mallory v. United States, in which the Supreme Court overturned a criminal conviction on the ground that the defendant’s confession was obtained unlawfully.

Click here to register for this Zoom program.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

Kroncke on American Legal Education and Chinese Law Reform

Jedidiah J. Kroncke, University of Hong Kong Faculty of Law, has posted Model, System, or Node? Understanding Legal Education Reform in Twentieth-century China and Beyond:

This chapter examines the complex influence and impact of American legal education models in China's 20th-century legal reforms. It argues that while American legal ideas were widely discussed and promoted, their actual influence on China's legal education system was limited. A conceptual framework is introduced which distinguishes between a country's system of legal education, its ideal model of a law school, and episodic nodes for integrating elite domestic and international legal capital. The analysis reveals that American legal education, particularly the "Harvard model," was often presented as an ideal for reform in China. However, it primarily functioned as a model for elite, non-replicable nodes. Ultimately, this chapter challenges claims of significant American influence. It also highlights the importance of understanding the contested nature of legal education reform within China's specific historical and political context.

--Dan Ernst 

Symposium on the Intellectual History of Legal History

 [We have the following announcement.  DRE]

International Symposium (12-13 Juni 2025): An Intellectual History of Legal History

On 12–13 June 2025, leading scholars from across Europe will gather in Thurnau, Germany, for the international symposium An Intellectual History of Legal History (INTELLEX).

The INTELLEX Symposium (12–13 June 2025) explores the intellectual history of legal history through a diverse range of themes, periods, and regions. Participants examine how legal knowledge has been shaped, taught, and transmitted from the early modern period to the 20th century, across Europe and into colonial and post-colonial contexts.

The symposium is organized by the Bayreuth Humboldt Centre, University of Bayreuth. It is hosted at the Institut für Fränkische Landesgeschichte (IFLG) in Thurnau, Germany.  The head of our research group, Sören Koch, is among the keynote speakers.

More information about the symposium can be found here

Tuesday, June 3, 2025

Cantisano on "Administrative Despotism" in Brazil

Pedro Jimenez Cantisano has published, in Portuguese,  “Um perpétuo estado de sítio”: atos de império e despotismo administrativo na Primeira República in the Revista Direito e Práxis:

This article explores the appropriations of the notion of administrative despotism in early-twentieth-century Brazil. Across the Atlantic world, during the end of the nineteenth and beginning of the twentieth century, this idea was used to criticize the expansion of the State through administrative law. The references for despotism varied in time, from the old regime’s absolutism to twentieth-century totalitarianism. In Brazil, the references were both global, such as the notion of oriental despotism, and local, such as the usages of state of siege during the early years of the Brazilian first republic. These appropriations are shown through legislation, legal doctrine, judicial records, and newspapers, in the context of urban and public health reforms implemented in Rio de Janeiro, from 1903 to 1909. The consequences of the distinction between atos de império and atos de gestão for the judicial control of the administration, among other aspects of an administrative law that was especially reformulated to support the reforms, were central for debates about administrative despotism.
–Dan Ernst

AHA Congressional Briefing on Tariffs

 [We have the following announcement.  DRE]

The American Historical Association invites you to attend a Congressional Briefing offering historical perspectives on tariffs. The briefing will take place on Wednesday, June 11, at 9:00 a.m. ET in Rayburn House Office Building Room 2075.

Panelists Douglas A. Irwin (Dartmouth Coll.), Sharon Ann Murphy (Providence Coll.), and Eric Rauchway (Univ. of California, Davis) will discuss how the government has implemented tariffs in the past, and how they have impacted the domestic and global economies. The AHA’s Alexandra Levy will moderate.

The event is open to the public; no registration is required. A breakfast spread and coffee will be served. If you have any questions, please email [email protected] .

The AHA’s Congressional Briefings series seeks to provide Congressional staff members, journalists, and other members of the policy community with the historical context essential to understanding contemporary issues. The sessions are strictly nonpartisan and avoid advancing particular policy prescriptions or legislative agendas. Recordings of our recent briefings providing historical perspectives are available on the AHA’s website.

Monday, June 2, 2025

Shugerman on Chinese Immigrants and Birthright Citizenship

Jed H. Shugerman, Boston University School of Law, has posted An Originalist Case for Birthright Citizenship of Unlawful Immigrants' Children: Early Restrictions on Chinese Immigrants as Categorical Context:

Some opponents of birthright citizenship for the children of "unlawful immigrants" make the following originalist claim about the Fourteenth Amendment: Even if the clause meant birthright citizenship, it applies today only to "lawful immigrants," because the category of "unlawful immigrant" or "illegal immigrant" did not exist in the 1860s, when the clause was written and ratified. This assertion was the main substantive argument about birthright citizenship offered by the Solicitor General in Trump v. CASA, and it is historically inaccurate. 

To the contrary, the concept of "unlawful immigrants" existed in the 1850s-60s, and Americans ratified birthright citizenship without indicating any doubt that citizenship would extend to their children. This paper summarizes recent historical scholarship documenting a political movement against Chinese immigrants in western states and territories-especially California-leading to state restrictions against Chinese immigrants in the 1850s and 1860s, followed by early federal restrictions. These immigration restrictions were mostly a system of taxes, fees, and fines against immigrants, plus criminal penalties on U.S. citizens who engaged in illegal transit. These restrictions established a new legal regime with similar concepts of "unlawful" immigrants. They also demonstrated the rise of a powerful political movement that sought more direct exclusion, so that the nation had notice that the modern category of unlawful or illegal immigrants was more than just foreseeable; it was politically and conceptually on the table in the 1860s. In 1866, the congressional debates over the citizenship clause explicitly confirmed that the text would grant citizenship to Chinese immigrants, without raising a concern about this category of immigrants.  

--Dan Ernst 

Del Mar's "Neil McCormick"

Maksymilian Del Mar, Queen Mary University of London, has published Neil MacCormick: A Life in Politics, Philosophy, and Law (Cambridge University Press):

Neil MacCormick (1941–2009) was one of the twentieth century's most important legal philosophers and one of Scotland's most influential public intellectuals. This book tells the story of his political and philosophical life, from his intensely political childhood as the son of 'King John', one of the founders of the Scottish National Party, through to his involvement in Scottish politics – especially as the author of SNP's constitutional policy – and his role as a Member of the European Parliament, helping to draft the European Constitution. With special attention to MacCormick's character, this book offers a reading of his entire oeuvre, covering his contributions to theories of legal and moral reasoning, institutional legal theory, nationalism, post-sovereignty, subsidiarity, and constitutional pluralism in Europe. This book reads MacCormick as a highly creative thinker who excelled in the art of constructing inclusive middles and thereby developed his own distinctive approach to politics and philosophy.

--Dan Ernst 

Saturday, May 31, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Martha S. Jones and Kate Masur's amicus brief on birthright citizenship in a First Circuit immigration case.  They and others will participate in a Brennan Center event on the topic on June 12. 
  • “Trust in the state: Negotiating legal and bureaucratic encounters," a special issue of the Journal of Legal Anthropology has published open access (H-Law).
  • The Council of the ABA Section on Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar has put out for notice and comment a proposal to double the the number of required credits of experiential education for JD graduates from 6 to 12.  One wonders what the move portends for enrollment in legal history courses and seminars.   
  • Princeton University’s James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions has awarded graduating senior Ben Woodard the Stephen Whelan ‘68 Senior Thesis Prize for Excellence in Constitutional Law and Political Thought for “Nature National, Slavery Sectional: Southern Judges’ Choice for Freedom in Antebellum Legal and Political Culture.”  
  • Lawbook Exchange's latest catalogue of Scholarly Law & Legal History, including some letters from Louis Brandeis to Max Lowenthal. 
  • ICYMI: Ex parte Merryman and current immigration battles (Maryland Reporter).  Inside Kenya’s Judiciary Museum (Star).  A slideshow on the Scopes Trial (msn).  Harvard Relinquishes Photographs of Enslaved Individuals (Harvard Crimson).  A defense of Bruen's originalism (Volokh Conspiracy). 
  • Update: William G. Ross on the centennial of Pierce v. Society of Sisters (JURIST).

Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers. 

Friday, May 30, 2025

Keyes on the Evolution of Legislative Drafting

John Mark Keyes, University of Ottawa, has posted Evolution of Legislative Drafting Style in English:

This paper reviews the evolution of legislative drafting style in English beginning in the Middle Ages in England through to modern reforms adopted by the national drafting offices of Canada, the UK, Australia and New Zealand. It concludes there is remarkable similarity in the styles adopted by these offices with the exception of some of the more debatable techniques proposed to enhance the readability of legislation.
--Dan Ernst

Costello on the Borough Origins of Judicial Review

Kevin Costello, Sutherland School of Law, University College Dublin, has posted Two Eighteenth Century Somerset Boroughs and the Origins of Modern Judicial Review:

The function of modern judicial review is to correct infringements of those elementary standards which must be observed by officials exercising public power. That framework of standards includes norms against exercising power for an improper or corrupt purpose, or when biased, or in disregard of the precepts of natural justice. Of course, for the high court to be able to judicially review jurisdictional , jurisdictional error must be proven: ‘it is axiomatic that a defect has to be proven for in order for certiorari to issue’. Since the late eighteenth century, it has been possible to prove a breach of those standards by written witness testimony in the form of an affidavits. But the power of the High Court to admit witness statements to prove official breaches of jurisdiction was not always recognised.

--Dan Ernst

Infanti's "Human Toll"

Anthony C. Infanti, University of Pittsburgh School of Law, has published The Human Toll: Taxation and Slavery in Colonial America (NYU Press)

The Human Toll documents how the American colonies used tax law to dehumanize enslaved persons, taxing them alongside valuable commodities upon their forced arrival and then as wealth-generating assets in the hands of slaveholders. Anthony C. Infanti examines how taxation also proved to be an important component for subjugating and controlling enslaved persons, both through its shaping of the composition of new arrivals to the colonies and through its funding of financial compensation to slaveholders for the destruction of their “property” to ensure their cooperation in the administration of capital punishment. The variety of tax mechanisms chosen to fund slaveholder compensation payments conveyed messages about who was thought to benefit from—and, therefore, who should shoulder the burden of—slaveholder compensation while opening a revealing window into these colonial societies.

While the story of colonial tax law is intrinsically linked to advancing slavery and racism, Infanti reveals how several colonies used the power of taxation as a means of curtailing the slave trade. Though often self-interested, these efforts show how taxation can be used not only in the service of evil but also to correct societal injustices. Providing a fascinating account of slavery’s economic entrenchment through the history of American tax law, The Human Toll urges us to consider the lessons that fiscal history holds for those working in the reparations movement today.
Professor Infanti discusses writing the book in this essay in Tax Notes State.

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Birthright Citizenship at the Brennan Center

[We have the following announcement from the Brennan Center for Justice.  DRE]

The Guarantee of Birthright Citizenship – Thursday, June 12, 2025 // 12:30 – 1:30 P.M. EST

On the very first day of his second term in office, President Donald Trump issued an executive order purporting to strip U.S. citizenship from the children of undocumented immigrants. The order directly conflicts with the plain language of the Constitution’s 14th Amendment, which states that “all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” And it defies more than a century of case law.

The executive order met with immediate legal challenges and a wave of court rulings blocking its enforcement, and it is destined for a Supreme Court showdown. The history of the 14th Amendment will likely play a key role in the outcome of the case. What historical currents led to the ratification of the amendment’s Citizenship Clause? What did the framers intend? How did courts interpret its guarantees in the decades following? How do today’s attacks on birthright citizenship relate to historical attempts to deny citizenship to people born and living in the United States?

Join the Brennan Center virtually on Thursday, June 12, at 12:30 p.m. ET for a discussion with leading experts on the historical and legal dimensions of the attack on birthright citizenship.  Produced in partnership with the Organization of American Historian.  [Register here.]

Speakers
Kate Masur, Professor of History, Northwestern University
Martha Jones, Professor of History, Johns Hopkins University
Erika Lee, Bae Family Professor of History, Radcliffe Alumnae Professor, Harvard University
Moderator: Kareem Crayton, Vice President for Washington, DC, Brennan Center

Law & Society Dissertation Prize to Fei

At the recent meeting of the Law and Society Association, the winner of the annual Dissertation Prize was announced. The award went to Du Fei (University of Oklahoma), for a dissertation titled "Local Women, Global Histories? Gendering Economic Life, Law, and Islam in Early Modern Transregional India." The citation:

Du Fei, Assistant Professor at the University of Oklahoma, who earned his PhD from Cornell University, has been selected as the winner of this year’s Dissertation Prize. His dissertation, “Local Women, Global Histories? Gendering Economic Life, Law, and Islam in Early Modern Transregional India,” challenges gendered constructions of Islamic law and reveals how gender-insensitive narratives have shaped dominant histories of trade and travel in global Islam. 

Historians have long traced the movements of merchants, colonizers, and legal professionals across transregional India, often casting men as global actors and non-European women as local, domestic subjects. But what was it precisely that made some of these histories “global” and others “local”? What roles did women actually play in the economic life of the time, and how did they engage with legal systems, while navigating financial and social networks? Drawing on extraordinarily rich archival research and sharp theoretical analysis, Fei’s dissertation uncovers a fascinating inversion of mainstream assumptions about the histories of gender in Islam. 

While Muslim women in transregional India are often portrayed as passive or economically marginalized, Fei shows that some acted as strategic negotiators—engaging with jurists, judges, and male kin to assert claims through Islamic law on property and inheritance. Rather than being confined to the private sphere, these women regularly negotiated with male kin, jurists, judges, and officials in multiple courts. Taking readers across the lands and seas of South Asia, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia, Fei effectively constructs a new archive for the legal history of South Asia, drawing on sources in Persian, Arabic, English, and Dutch.  

By positioning the household as a critical site of economic activity, the dissertation also unsettles simplistic accounts of patriarchy and offers a major methodological and substantive contribution to the economic and legal history of global early modernity. It advances scholarship on legal pluralism by demonstrating how women navigated overlapping legal traditions as they engaged in debates among Muslim jurists, colonial officials, and Orientalists. In short, Fei’s dissertation represents the epitome of law and society scholarship. 

The committee unanimously praised the exceptional reach of the dissertation, spanning gender studies, legal history, and Islamic studies, and its potential to mark a leap forward in socio-legal scholarship that employs historical analysis. Beautifully written and meticulously researched, the dissertation lays the groundwork for an important interdisciplinary intervention. In a period marked by opportunistic originalism, it offers socio-legal scholars a compelling example of how careful archival rereading can serve as a powerful counterpoint in legal argumentation about global histories. 

Congratulations to Professor Fei!

Auerbach's "Overseer State"

Sascha Auerbach, University of Nottingham, has published The Overseer State: Slavery, Indenture and Governance in the British Empire, 1812–1916 (Cambridge University Press):   

In this compelling work, Sascha Auerbach offers a bold new historical interpretation of late-stage slavery, its long-term legacies, and its entanglement with the development of the modern state. In the wake of abolition, from the Caribbean to southern Africa to Southeast Asia, a fusion of government authority and private industry replaced the iron chains of slavery with equally powerful fetters of law and regulation. This 'overseer-state' helped move, often through deceptive and coercive methods, millions of Indian and Chinese indentured laborers across Britain's imperial possessions. With a perspective that ranges from Parliament to the plantation, the book brings to light the fascinating and terrifying history of the world's first truly global labor system, those who struggled under its heavy yoke, and the bitter legacies left in its wake.

--Dan Ernst

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Law & Society John Hope Franklin Prize to Harris, Harawa

At the recent meeting of the Law and Society Association, the Association announced the winner of the John Hope Franklin Prize (recognizing "exceptional scholarship in the field of Race, Racism and the Law"). Legal historical scholarship made a strong showing. The winners, along with the citations, were as follows:

Jasmine E. Harris – University of Pennsylvania
The Political Economy of Conservatorship. UCLA Law Review, 71(5), 1364-1482

Jasmine E. Harris’s “The Political Economy of Conservatorship,” published in the UCLA Law Review, reinterprets conservatorship as a tool of racial and economic subordination. Harris weaves legal history, disability theory, and racial critique into an incisive analysis of how disability law has been used to extract labor and property from Black and Indigenous communities. By connecting conservatorship’s historical deployment to its contemporary operation, Harris exposes the system’s deep-seated structural harm. Her article exemplifies socio-legal scholarship at its finest and proposes an abolitionist framework with broad implications for race, disability, and legal reform.

Daniel S. Harawa – New York University
Coloring in the Fourth Amendment. Harvard Law Review, 137(6), 1533-1582

Daniel Harawa’s “Coloring in the Fourth Amendment,” published in the Harvard Law Review, delivers a powerful and incisive challenge to the colorblind assumptions embedded in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence. By exposing how race-neutral legal standards mask racial subordination in policing, Harawa articulates a doctrinal and normative argument for a race-conscious reasonable person standard. Grounded in constitutional theory and racial justice advocacy, this article exemplifies rigorous scholarship and has the potential to reshape legal understandings of policing, seizures, and race

An honorable mention went to legal historian Giuliana Perrone (University of California, Santa Barbara) for Rehearsals for Reparations, The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 10(2), 132-150. The citation:

Giuliana Perrone’s “Rehearsals for Reparations,” published in the Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, uncovers a neglected archive of postbellum litigation in which freed people sued to enforce testamentary bequests from former enslavers. Recasting these legal actions as early reparations claims, Perrone reveals the moral and legal logic through which formerly enslaved individuals asserted their rights to property, land, and justice. The article is an outstanding contribution to the history of race and the law and offers a new frame for understanding reparations in American legal history.

Congratulations to all!

-- Karen Tani

Law & Society James Willard Hurst Book Prize to Powers, "Arbitraring Empire"

At the recent meeting of the Law and Society Association, the winner of James Willard Hurst Book Prize was announced. The prize "is awarded annually . . . for the best work in socio-legal history published in the previous year." This year's winner was Arbitrating Empire: United States Expansion and the Transformation of International Law (Oxford University Press, 2024), by Allison Powers (University Wisconsin-Madison). The citation:

The Hurst Awards Committee has selected Allison Power’s book Arbitrating Empire: United States Expansion and the Transformation of International Law as the recipient of the 2025 prize.  The book is a tour de force, drawing extensively on archival research to provide a richly textured account of the United States role in transforming international law.  The committee was impressed by the book’s nuance and rigorous historical detail, tracing how the United States has wielded authority not only to shape outcomes in international disputes through formal law and the use of international tribunals, but also at local economic levels such as Cuban sugar plantations, the locks and stops of the Panama Canal, the Texas cotton fields, and Arizona copper mines.  

The book is an excellent achievement that never loses sight of the consequences of the U.S. government’s political and economic influence in international law, disputes, and economic violence.   It is a work that thoughtfully narrates how “ordinary people” from throughout the world have attempted to use international law to advance the search for justice.  The manuscript is compellingly written, and thoroughly researched.  It resituates how American law and power have been framed during the past two centuries and the communities rendered invisible.  It is an excellent contribution to law and society scholarship.

Congratulations to Professor Powers!

-- Karen Tani

Rosenboim on Kelsen and the Chicago World Constitution Draft

Or Rosenboim, University of Bologna, has published, open access, Law, peace, and world order: Hans Kelsen’s global thought in the 1940s in the Journal of Global History:

In the mid-twentieth century, the jurist Hans Kelsen envisaged a new legal and political international order. His global thinking revolved around his idea of a ‘world state’ as a means to preserve peace. The article contends that Kelsen’s ideas on global legal and political order and a world state in the 1940s drew on his intellectual biography and on his earlier theoretical writings on order in the national scale. Another important source for understanding Kelsen’s global thinking is his critique of the Chicago World Constitution Draft, a mid-century project which proposed the establishment of a federal world state. As this study shows, Kelsen’s global thinking is characterised by a multi-scalar logic and an emphasis on positive law as the foundation of political and legal order. These elements render his ideas distinct in the historical trajectory of modern global thought, and deserve the attention of global historians today.

--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Lange on Nazi Lawyers and the Invasion of Poland

Felix Lange, University of Cologne, has published, open access, Claiming Legality: German Lawyers under the Swastika and the Aggression against Poland, in Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht 85:1 (2025) 17-42:

The article studies how German lawyers under the swastika justified the German aggression against Poland in 1939 and questioned the support of the United States for Poland and its Allies. It distinguishes three lines of argument: First, they claimed that the Kellogg-Briand Pact was devoid of normative content and thus could not bind the German Reich. This argument was coupled with a political critique of the League of Nations Covenant and the Kellogg-Briand Pact as instruments for maintaining the territorial status quo. Second, they put forward that the German Reich was acting in self-defence and that it was Poland, France, and Great Britain who had violated the Covenant and the Pact. Third, they rejected efforts to reconceptualise the existing rules of neutrality in light of the Covenant and the Pact. Reliance on a more traditional understanding of neutrality was intended to raise legal obstacles to siding with Poland, France, and Great Britain for third states such as the United States.

--Dan Ernst.  H/t ESCLH.

Monday, May 26, 2025

Zietlow on Fugitive Slaves, Free Blacks, and Birthright Citizenship

Rebecca E. Zietlow, University of Toledo College of Law, has posted Fugitives From Slavery, Free Black Activists, and the Origins of Birthright Citizenship, which is forthcoming in the Mississippi Law Journal:

In 1852, Martin Delany, a free Black doctor, journalist, and antislavery activist wrote an influential treatise on the rights of free Black people in which he claimed, “We are Americans having a birthright citizenship….”   Ten years later, during the Civil War, Delany backed his words with actions by volunteering for the Union Army and recruiting Black soldiers for an army regiment.   Delany’s theory of birthright citizenship was shared by thousands of antislavery and Black civil rights activists in the antebellum era, including William Yates, who wrote the first treatise on the rights of free Black people in 1838, and Frederick Douglass, a fugitive from slavery who became one of the most prominent abolitionist leaders.   Black activists used the language of citizenship to claim their status as rights-bearing people who belonged to the community in which they live and to the national polity.  Fugitives from slavery crossed state borders in search of freedom and human rights. Their free Black allies argued that they were citizens by virtue of being born in the United States and, as citizens, were entitled to human rights. Free Black people emphasized their loyalty to the national polity and their willingness to sacrifice to prove their loyalty.  During the Civil War, fugitives from slavery and free Black people volunteered to serve in the Union army, risking their lives in support of the polity and proving their loyalty and eligibility for citizenship rights.  This Essay explores the origins of birthright citizenship and describes the centrality of citizenship rights in the advocacy of people, like Delany, who participated in the Free Black Civil Rights Movement and Antislavery Movement. Birthright citizenship is a promise of equality for all people who are born in the United States, regardless of their race or the national origin of their parents. It is in our Constitution today because of the advocacy of people who were brought involuntarily into our country and claimed their right to citizenship with their actions and their activism.

--Dan Ernst

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Over at Balkinization: a symposium on Dylan C. Penningroth's Before the Movement: The Hidden History of Black Civil Rights (Liveright, 2023), featuring contributors Evelyn Atkinson (Tulane), Ian Ayres (Yale), Mark Graber (Maryland), Steve Griffin (Tulane), Carol Rose (Yale), and Mark Tushnet (Harvard).
  • Aditya Bamzai, University of Virginia School of Law, Johann Neem, Western Washington University, Farah Peterson, University of Chicago Law School, and Jack Rakove, Stanford University, on the Articles of Confederation at the National Constitution Center (YouTube). 
  • Thomas J. McSweeney, William & Mary Law School, a recipient of the university's 2025 McGlothlin Award for Exceptional Teaching.
  • On Tuesday, June 10, 2025, 12PM – 1PM (Pacific) the Oregon Historical Society will host, as part of its series, "Historians and the News," the virtual event Free Speech, Misinformation, and National Security, a conversation with Sam Lebovic and Christopher McKnight Nichols.  Register here.
  •  Stephanie Hall Barclay, Georgetown University Law Center, responds to
    John Marshall Harlan (LC)
    Jud Campbell’s “Determining Rights” in the Harvard Law Review.
  • ICYMI: Harvard's Magna Carta (The Crimson). Charles Barzun on the quiet radicalism of Justice Souter (SCOTUSblog).  Centre College's sculpture of John Marshall Harlan (Lane Report). Bruce Ackerman and Susan Rose-Ackerman on the APA and Postwar Fears of Executive Power (Slate). Wong Kim Ark's great grandson and birthright citizenship (Post Reports).

Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers. 

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