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ASLH
Newsletter
Summer 2001 |
Table
of Contents
2001 Annual Meeting, Chicago
1
Ballot
3
Nominee for President-elect 3
Nominees for Board of Directors 4
Nominees for Board of Directors (Graduate Student position) 8
Nominees for Nominating Committee 9
Announcements 10
Paul L. Murphy Prize
10
J. Willard Hurst Summer Institute in Legal History
11
Law & History Review 11
Studies in Legal History
12
University of Texas Law Library Inaugurates Legal History Publication
Series 12
H-Law
14
Visiting Scholars, Center for the Study of Law and Society, University of
California, Berkeley
15
Draft program [Chicago] 16
UNC Press Titles
35
<<
h-law
2001 Annual Meeting, Chicago
The Society’s thirty-first annual meeting will be held Thursday-Sunday,
November 8-11, in Chicago. Registration materials and the draft program for the
meeting are bound in the center of this newsletter. Be sure to return the
registration forms by the dates indicated.
Note that there will be a set
of program sessions on Sunday morning, November 11th, 9-10:30.
In addition, please note these special events, for which you are asked to
indicate on the pre-registration form your planned attendance:
Thursday, November 8th
2:30-4:30 pm, Chicago Historical Society (self-guided tour)
5:30-7:00 pm, ASLH reception, Allegro Hotel
Friday, November 9th
7:30-8:45 am, continental breakfast, Allegro Hotel
1:00-2:00 pm, Tour of Cook County Archives
4:00 pm, Plenary Session, Michael Stolleis, Director, Max-Planck-Institut
für Europäische
Rechtsgeschichte, Frankfurt
5:15 pm, Reception following the Plenary address
(Transportation will be provided between the Allegro Hotel and
the University of Chicago Law School)
Saturday, November 10th
7:30-8:45 am, continental breakfast, Allegro Hotel
12:15-1:45 pm, annual luncheon
6:00-8:00 pm, reception, ABA Museum of Law, ABA Building
(transportation provided)
Sunday, November 11th
7:30-8:45 am, continental breakfast, Allegro Hotel
Special thanks for all their excellent work in arranging the annual meeting
go to Vicky Woeste of the American Bar Foundation, chair of the Local
Arrangements Committee, and to Bill Novak, History, University of Chicago, chair
of the Program Committee. The other members of the Local Arrangements Committee
are Ben Brown, John Marshall Law School
David Morrison, Illinois Campaign for Political Reform, Sue Sheridan-Walker,
Northeastern Illinois University, and Stephen Siegel, DePaul Law School. The
other members of the Program Committee are Mary Sarah Bilder, Law, Boston
College, Howard Gillman, Political Science, University of Southern California,
Julius Kirshner, History, University of Chicago, Dan Klerman, Law, University of
Southern California, Felicia Kornbluh, History, Duke University, Ken Ledford,
History, Case Western Reserve University, Maria Elena Martinez, History,
American Bar Foundation, Jennifer Mnookin, Law, University of Virginia, Dalia
Tsuk, Law University of Arizona, Barbara Welke, History, University of
Minnesota, Michael Willrich, History, Brandeis University. Together, they have
all worked hard to produce what looks to be a superb meeting.
The Society is also most appreciative of the financial support provided by
the American Bar Foundation, DePaul Law School, John Marshall Law School,
Northwestern Law School, and the University of Chicago Law School.
^
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top
The Ballot
The ballot, bound at the center of this newsletter, reflects the favorable
vote received by the amendment to the Society’s by-laws to create a position
for a graduate student on the board of directors. Biographies of the nominees
follow this paragraph. Many thanks to the nominating committee for their
conscientious work: Mary Dudziak, University of Southern California, chair,
Thomas Gallanis, Ohio State University, Philip Hamburger, University of Chicago,
Sarah Hanley, University of Iowa, and Victoria Woeste, American Bar Foundation.
Nominees:
Harry N. Scheiber is the Stefan Riesenfeld Professor of Law and History,
University of California, Berkeley. He joined the Boalt Hall School of Law
faculty at the University in 1980, after service as Professor of History at
Dartmouth College and as Professor of American History at UC San Diego in La
Jolla. A graduate of Columbia College in Columbia University, he holds the MA
and PhD in history from Cornell University. His service to the society has
included two terms on the board of directors as well as contributions to the
journal. His is an honorary fellow of the Society. He served for eight years as
chair of the Jurisprudence and Social Policy doctoral program at Berkeley, and
has directed graduate students in legal history both in JSP and in the History
Department. He currently teaches American legal history courses, including a
seminar on American federalism, and courses on history and contemporary analysis
of ocean law. He served for six years as Associate Dean of Boalt Hall, was chair
of the UC Berkeley faculty senate, was founding director of the international
conference series known as "The Berkeley Seminar on Federalism," and
serves currently as acting director of the Center for the Study of Law and
Society, director of Boalt’s Sho Sato Research Program in Japanese and US Law,
and a member of the Bancroft Library’s faculty committee. He has also been
chair of the UC Berkeley and UC systemwide faculty library committees, the
Jefferson Lectures committee, and other UC Senate committees; and currently he
chairs the California Sea Grant College Program board. He was awarded an
honorary doctorate in laws by Uppsala University, Sweden, in 1998; was
Distinguished Fulbright Lecturer in Australia; has twice held Guggenheim
fellowships; and also held fellowship awards from SSRC, ACLS, the Japan Society
for the Promotion of Science; the Rockefeller Foundation; and NEH. He was twice
a fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. In public
and professional service, he has been the president of the New Hampshire Civil
Liberties Union, president of the Agricultural History Society, vice president
of the California Supreme Court Historical Society (also the Society’s
Yearbook editor), a trustee of the Law & Society Association, chair of the
College Board’s Advanced Placement Committee in American History and a member
of CEEB’s Achievement Test Committee for American History; chair of the
National Assessment of Education committee on History and Civics; on the
founding committee for Project 87 of AHA-APSA; member of numerous AHA and OAH
committees, including (as chair) the Bancroft and Littleton-Griswold committees;
and on editorial boards of The Encyclopedia of the American Constitution,
and also of Reviews in American History, Western Legal History, Law
in Context, Business History Review, and other journals. His
contributions to programs for history teachers also include directorships and
co-directorships, as well as lecturing, in three summer NEH programs held at UC
Berkeley for high school instructors; and teaching in a National Archives summer
teachers’ seminar. His books include The Wilson Administration and Civil
Liberties, 1917-21; U.S. Economic History: Selected Readings (ed.); Ohio
Canal Era: A Case Study of State Government and the Economy, 1820-61 (two
editions); The Old Northwest (ed.); American Economic History
(co-au. with H. Faulkner and H. Vatter); American Law and the Constitutional
Order (co-ed. with L. Friedman); Legal Culture and the Legal Profession
(co-ed. with L. Friedman); Law of the Sea – The Common Heritage and
Emerging Challenges (ed.); The State and Freedom of Contract (ed.);
and Inter-Allied Conflicts and Ocean Law, 1945-53 (in press). He also
edited and contributed articles to the six-volume Berkeley Seminar Series on
Federalism, including Federalism and the Judicial Mind. He has
published some 120 articles, book chapters, and monographic studies in journals
of law, history, political science, and economics, among them "The Pet
Banks in Jacksonian Politics and Finance," Jnl. of Economic History
23 (1963); "The Road to Munn: Eminent Domain and the Concept of Public
Purpose in the State Courts," Perspectives in Am. Hist. 5 (1971);
"Federalism and the American Economic Order, 1789-1910," Law and
Society Review (1975); "Origins of the ‘Abstention’ Doctrine in
Ocean Law: Japanese-U.S. Relations and the Pacific Fisheries, 1937-52," Ecology
Law Quar., (1989), 23-99; "Innovation, Resistance and Change; A History
of Judicial Reform and the California Courts, 1960-1990," Southern
Calif. Law Rev., 66 (1993); "Redesigning the Architecture of
Federalism: An American Tradition," Yale Law and Policy Review/Yale Jnl.
of Regulation (1996); "The Direct Ballot and State
Constitutionalism," Rutgers Law Jnl., 28 (1997); "Bayonets in
Paradise: ... Martial Law in Hawai’i, 1941-1946," U. of Hawai’i Law.
Rev., 19 (1998) (co-au. with Jane L. Scheiber); and "Federalism and the
Processes of Governance in Hurst’s Legal History," Law & Hist. Rev.,
18 (2000). Currently he is completing a book on geopolitics, science, and the
origins of modern ocean law, 1937-80; continues with research on the history of
American federalism, and on law, technology, and American economic development;
and is the editor and a chapter author for a forthcoming five-author history of
the California Supreme Court scheduled for publication in 2002.
Gregory S. Alexander is the A. Robert Noll Professor of Law at Cornell
Law School, where he has been since 1984. He has written extensively in property
law as well as American legal history. His book, Commodity & Propriety:
Competing Visions of Property in American Legal Thought, 1776-1970 (Univ. of
Chicago Press, 1997), was selected as "Best Book of the Year [1997] in
Law" by the American Publishers Association. An earlier article, "The
Transformation of Trusts as a Legal Category, 1800-1914," received the
Society’s Erwin Surrency Prize as the best article published in the Law &
History Review during 1987. He has appeared on numerous panels at annual
meetings of the Society and has served on the Society’s Planning Committee for
the Annual Meeting. This past year he served on the Committee on Honors. Also
this past year he served as Chair of the Willard Hurst Prize Committee of the
Law & Society Association. He was recently awarded a Fellowship at the
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, in Palo Alto, and will be
at the Center during the 2003-04 academic year.
Thomas J. Davis is professor of history and visiting professor of law at
Arizona State University in Tempe. A Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Fordham
University, he earned a M.A. and Ph.D. in United States history and African
history from Columbia University, a M.A. in journalism from Ball State
University in Muncie, Indiana, and a J.D. from the University at Buffalo. His
books include The New York Conspiracy (Beacon Press, 1971); A Rumor of
Revolt: The ‘Great Negro Plot’ in Colonial New York (Free
Press/Macmillan, 1985; pb. University of Massachusetts Press, 1990), which won
the Gustavus Myers Center Honorable Mention Award as one of the best books
published in 1985 on racial intolerance in the United States; and Africans in
the Americans: A History of the Black Diaspora, with Michael L. Conniff (St.
Martin’s Press, 1994). A life-member of the American Society for Legal
History, he has been a member of the editorial board of the Law and History
Review since 1996 and a member of the Publications Committee since 1998. His
research focuses on race and the law and civil rights.
Sarah Barringer Gordon is Professor of Law and History at the University
of Pennsylvania, where she teaches courses in American legal history,
church-state relations and property in the law school, and American religious
history in the history department. She has been a member of the ASLH since 1991,
and has served on the Nominating Committee (1996-99), and the Program Committee
(member, 1997, Chair, 1999). She received her Ph.D. in history from Princeton,
J.D. and Masters in Ethics from Yale, and B.A. from Vassar. She also serves on
the boards of Vassar, the National Constitution Center, the Historical Society
of Pennsylvania, and the Library Company of Philadelphia. She is the author of The
Mormon Question: Polygamy and Constitutional Conflict in Nineteenth-Century
America (forthcoming fall, 2001, from Studies in Legal History, University
of North Carolina Press). Recent articles on the law of blasphemy and woman
suffrage have appeared in the American Quarterly and the Journal of
American History. She has also served on the Littleton-Griswold Prize
Committee for the American Historical Association (1996-99, chair 1997-98) and
the Hurst Prize Committee for the Law & Society
Association (1999-2000), and is on the editorial board of Law and Social
Inquiry. She has received fellowships from Princeton University, Cornell
University, and the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation.
Donald R. Kelley is James Westfall Thompson Professor of History, Rutgers
University. He studied history at Harvard (BA 1953) and Columbia (PhD 1962), and
taught at SUNY Binghamton, Harvard, and Rochester. His interest has been in the
interdisciplinary relations between law and history, pursued in his first book, Foundations
of Modern Historical Scholarship: Language, Law, and History in the French
Renaissance (1970), and in some thirty articles on aspects of the European
legal tradition in Italy, France, Germany, and England, many collected in two
volumes, History, Law and the Human Sciences (1984) and The Writing of
History and the Study of Law (1997). He has also published Historians and
the Law in Postrevolutionary France (1984) and a large survey, The Human
Measure: Western Social Thought and the Legal Tradition (1990). Among his
articles are "Clio and the Lawyers: Forms of Historical Consciousness in
Medieval Jurisprudence," Medievalia et Humanistica, n.s., 5 (1974),
25-49; "Vera Philosophia: "The Philosophical Significance of
Renaissance Jurisprudence," Journal of the History of Philosophy,
14, (1976), 267-79; "Gaius Noster: Substructures of Western Social
Thought," American Historical Review, 84 (1979), 619-48; "Civil
Science in the Renaissance: Jurisprudence Italian Style," Historical
Journal, 22 (1979), 777-97; "Civil Science in the Renaissance:
Jurisprudence in the French Manner," History of European Ideas, 2
(1981), 261-76; "Hermes, Clio, Themis: Historical Interpretation and Legal
Hermeneutics," Journal of Modern History, 55 (1983), 644-68;
"What Was Property? Legal Dimensions of the Social Question in France
1789-1848" (with Bonnie Smith), American Philosophical Society, Proceedings
(1984), 200-30; "Civil Science in the Renaissance: The Problem of
Interpretation" The Languages of Political Theory in Early Modern Europe,
ed. A. Pagden (Cambridge, 1987), 57-78; "Jurisconsultus Perfectus: The
Lawyer as Renaissance Man," Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld
Institutes, 51 (1988), 84-102; "Second Nature: The Idea of Custom in
European Law, Society, and Culture," The Transmission of Culture in
Early Modern Europe, ed. A. Grafton, (U. Penn. 1990), 131-72; "Law and
Jurisprudence," Cambridge History of Political Thought, 1450-1700
(Cambridge, 1991), 66-94; "Men of Law and the French Revolution," Politics,
Ideology and the Law in Early Modern Europe, ed. A. Bakos (Rochester, 1994),
127-46; and "What Pleases the Prince: Justinian, Napoleon, and the
Lawyers," History of Political Thought (2001). He has taught courses
on history and law, has represented the field of law for the Renaissance Society
of America, and has given papers and comments at ASLH meetings.
Victoria List is an Associate Professor of History at Washington &
Jefferson College, where she teaches an entertainingly diverse collection of
courses, ranging from Ancient Civilization to American Constitutional History.
She is also the Coordinator of W&J’s Integrated Semester program. She
received her law degree from the University of Wisconsin, and her Ph.D. from the
University of Michigan. She has of late been on sabbatical, catching up on
recent scholarship in her own field (early modern England) and working on two
articles, both of which involve church/state questions as experienced in the
ecclesiastical courts in the post-Reformation era. Her past service to the ASLH
consists of two stints on the Program Committee (1992 and 1999, respectively),
membership on both the Sutherland Committee (1994-97) and the Nominating
Committee (1997-00, the last two years of which as chair). She also served in
2000 as a replacement member of the Surrency Committee.
Kathleen A. Parrow is professor of history at Black Hills State
University in South Dakota, where she teaches early European history and
historiography. Her M.A. is from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and her
Ph.D. is from the University of Rochester. Prior to 1991 she taught at
Appalachian State University and the University of Iowa. She has been a member
of the ASLH since 1989. She was just reelected as the president of the South
Dakota Council of Higher Education, the state faculty union for which she is
also the chief contract negotiator. Her publications include From Defense to
Resistance: Justification of Violence during the French Wars of Religion
(American Philosophical Society, 1993) and "Prudence or Jurisprudence?
Etienne Pasquier and the Responsa Prudentium as a Source of Law" in Historians
and Ideologues (U. of Rochester Press, 2001). She has presented a number of
papers on French and Roman law at various conferences and held an NEH fellowship
at the Folger Shakespeare Library in 1998-99 for research on the use of law in
sixteenth-century French literature. Her current research is primarily on
sixteenth-century French customary law, particularly the issues of guardianship,
the age of majority, and the centralization and systematization of provincial
French law, with several articles and a book in progress.
Richard Ross is an assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin
(Madison), where he holds a joint appointment in the law school and history
department. He teaches courses on American legal history, the rule of law in
Anglo-American constitutionalism, and Trusts and Estates. His B.A. (1984), J.D.
(1989), and Ph.D. in history (1998) are from Yale University. He is engaged in
an ongoing study, working its way towards a book, on the intellectual history of
legal communications in early modern England and early America. This project has
yielded, "The Memorial Culture of Early Modern English Lawyers: Memory as
Keyword, Shelter, and Identity, 1560-1640," Yale Journal of Law and the
Humanities (1998), which received the honorable mention for the 1999
Sutherland Prize. Other interests include the impact of ethnic diversity on
legal culture in early America, and the development of a historical perspective
about the effect of electronic media on legal thought and practice. Articles on
these subjects have appeared in or are pending in Law and Social Inquiry,
The Worlds of John Winthrop: England and New England, 1588-1649 (ed.
Francis Bremer), the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and the William
and Mary Quarterly. He has received fellowships from Yale’s Institution
for Social and Policy Studies; has been a visiting scholar in the Harvard
history department (1995-96); and in the fall of 2000 held a Spencer
postdoctoral fellowship at the Newberry Library in Chicago. His service to the
Society includes participating on the program committee for two years
(1998-2000) and, currently, chairing the Surrency Prize selection committee.
Lucy E. Salyer is an associate professor in the History Department of the
University of New Hampshire. She earned her doctorate from the Jurisprudence
& Social Policy Program at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1989.
At the University of New Hampshire, she serves as graduate director and teaches
courses in legal history, immigration history and modern American history. She
has served on the editorial board of Law & History Review since 1995
and as a representative to the Membership Committee of the Organization of
American Historians (1992-96). She has been awarded fellowships from the
National Endowment of the Humanities and the American Council of Learned
Socities, and the Louis Pelzer Memorial Award from the Organization of American
Historians. Her book, Laws Harsh as Tigers: Chinese Immigrants and the
Shaping of Modern Immigration Law (University of North Carolina Press,
1995), received the Theodore Saloutos Memorial Prize from the Immigration
History Society. More recent publications include "Protective Labor
Legislation and the California Supreme Court, 1911-1924," and "A
Progressive Judiciary: The California Supreme Court and Judicial Reform in the
Progressive Era," both published in the California Supreme Court
Historical Society Yearbook. She is currently working on a socio-legal
history of citizenship policies between 1898 and 1940.
Graduate Student Nominees:
Karen Bruner is a Ph.D. candidate in history at Syracuse University. Her
major area of concentration is modern American history with a focus on
constitutional history. Her doctoral dissertation will concern the 1956 U.S.
Supreme Court case, Pennsylvania v. Nelson. It continues her interest in
the Warren Court and McCarthyism, that she addressed in her history master’s
thesis, "The Watkins-Barenblatt Enigma: The Supreme Court,
the First Amendment and Congressional Investigations" for which she
received the Eldon Carter Prize for best university master’s thesis in 1990.
She received her M.A. in history from the University of Nebraska at Omaha in
1990 and was designated the Missouri Valley History Conference outstanding
graduate student in 1988-89. She also holds a B.A. in political science from the
College of Wooster and a Master of Arts in Teaching from Cornell University. She
has been at Syracuse since 1994, serving as teaching assistant and adjunct
instructor in various American history courses. In addition to receiving
recognition as an Outstanding Teaching Assistant, she was appointed Teaching
Fellow for the Maxwell School Undergraduate Teaching Grant in 1998 to teach with
a multi-disciplinary team on a course in Critical Issues for the United States.
She has also taught American History and Western Civilization courses at the
University of Nebraska at Omaha and with the University of Maryland European
Division. She has served on various departmental committees including the search
committee for a modern American historian. She has presented papers at the
Missouri Valley History Conference and written articles included in Historic
U.S. Court Cases, 1960-1990 and American Legislative Leaders in the
Northeast, 1911-1994. In the non-academic arena, she has been a secondary
social studies teacher and worked for the U.S. Office of Education on programs
in international education.
Jed Handelsman Shugerman is pursuing a joint J.D./PhD in history at Yale
University. He received his B.A. from Yale College, and will receive his J.D. in
2002. His note in the Yale Law Journal, "The Floodgates of Strict
Liability: Bursting Reservoirs and the Adoption of Fletcher v. Rylands in
the Gilded Age," jointly won the 2000 Joseph Parker Prize for the best
paper in legal history at Yale Law School. His article "The Louisiana
Purchase and the Reopening of the South Carolina Slave Trade, 1803-1808"
will be appearing in the Journal of the Early Republic in early 2002. His book
note on the post-World War II rights revolution and counter-revolution will be
appearing in the Yale Journal of Law & the Humanities, and his case
note on the death penalty and ineffectiveness of counsel, stemming from his
clinical work on capital defense, will be published in the Yale Law Journal. He
is currently writing about how legal battles over the control of state courts
shaped Marbury v. Madison and revealed its weaknesses. He was a Case and
Book Note editor on the Yale Law Journal, and Managing Editor of the Yale
Journal of Law & the Humanities. On a Dorot Fellowship and a Milah
Fellowship in Israel from 1996 to 1998, he studied Jewish law and history while
working for human rights organizations. He is planning on writing his
dissertation either on the rise of strict liability or on the changing political
and legal rhetoric of various labor organizations from the Civil War to the New
Deal.
Nominees for Nominating Committee:
Robert J. Cottrol is the Harold Paul Green Research Professor of Law and
Professor of History and Sociology at the George Washington University. He
received his A. B. in American Studies from Yale University in 1971 and his
Ph.D. in American Studies from Yale University in 1978. He received his J. D.
from the Georgetown University Law Center in 1984. He is the author of The
Afro-Yankees: Providence’s Black Community in the Antebellum Era
(Greenwood Press, 1982) and has edited Gun Control and the Constitution:
Sources and Explorations on the Second Amendment (Garland Publishing, 1993
and 1994). He has also edited From African to Yankee: Narratives of Slavery
and Freedom in Antebellum New England (M. E. Sharpe, 1998). He is currently
co-authoring a book on Brown v. Board of Education with Raymond T.
Diamond (University Press of Kansas). His articles and essays have appeared in
the American Journal of Legal History, Chicago-Kent Law Review, Georgetown
Law Journal, Law and Society Review, Slavery and Abolition, Tulane Law Review,
and the Yale Law Journal, among others. He is currently doing research on
race relations in Latin America, among other areas. His service to the American
Society for Legal History includes membership on the editorial board of the Law
and History Review (1985-1994), service on the program committee (1995 and
1997) and membership on the Board of Directors (1997- 2000).
Annette Gordon-Reed is a Professor of Law at New York Law School where
she teaches Property, Legal History, American Slavery and the Law, and Criminal
Procedure. She is a graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard Law School. She is
the author of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy
(University of Virginia Press, 1997). She has contributed essays to several
books and journals. Her current writing projects include editing Race on
Trial, a collection of essays on famous cases involving race in the United
States. Vernon Can Read, a memoir with Vernon Jordan Jr., to published in
October 2001, and The Hemings Family of Monticello, which will appear in
2003. She is on the Board of Advisors of the Papers of Thomas Jefferson, The
International Center for Jefferson Studies, and The Frederick D. Patterson
Institute (the United Negro College Fund). She is a member of the Society of
Historians of the Early American Republic, and the American Society For Legal
History.
Renée Lettow Lerner is Associate
Professor of Law at George Washington University, where she has been since 1997
and where she teaches the history of legal institutions and the law in England
and the United States. She received her A.B. in history from Princeton in 1990,
her M.Litt. in modern history from Oxford in 1992, and her J.D. from Yale in
1995. She has published articles on the history of civil and criminal procedure
in the United States, focusing on the relationships between judges, juries, and
lawyers; these include an examination of the history of new trial for verdict
against law and an exploration of judges’ power to comment on evidence in the
nineteenth century. She has also written about the history of codification
efforts in nineteenth-century England. Currently she is researching judicial
elections and relations between the bench and bar in nineteenth-century New
York, and is planning work on the history of the French judiciary.
Emily Field Van Tassel first joined the ASLH in 1977, which she is
appalled to realize was 24 years ago. She is currently serving on the board of
directors of the society, and has presented several papers over the years. She
received her graduate education in legal history from Case Western Reserve
University and the University of Chicago. She earned her J.D. at the University
of Wisconsin. She has taught legal and constitutional history (among many other
things) in both law and history departments. She has published articles in the
fields of family and women’s legal history and in the history of the federal
judiciary. She has written a book on the history of judicial removal and
accountability, and has co-authored a book on the history of federal
impeachments. She is currently completing a book on the social history of the
Civil War in northeastern Ohio that her father was writing at the time of his
death. Her own projects include a co-authored book on the history of judicial
independence, and a book provisionally titled "An Alternative to
Assassination: Jones v. Clinton and the Impeachment of a President."
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Announcements
Paul L. Murphy Prize
Applications are being accepted for the 2002 Paul L. Murphy Prize, honoring
the memory of Paul L. Murphy, late Professor Emeritus of History and American
Studies at the University of Minnesota and distinguished expert on U.S.
constitutional history and the history of American civil rights/civil liberties.
The Murphy Prize, an annual award of $1000, is intended to assist the research
and publication of scholars new to the field of constitutional U.S. history or
the history of American civil rights/civil liberties. To be eligible for the
Murphy Prize, an individual must possess the following qualifications: be
engaged, in the judgment of the selection committee, in significant research and
writing on U. S. constitutional history or the history of American civil
rights/civil liberties, with preference accorded to individuals employing
multi-disciplinary research approaches; hold the Ph.D. in History or a related
discipline; and not yet have published a book-length work in U.S. constitutional
history or the history of American civil rights/civil liberties. Public
historians, unaffiliated scholars, as well as faculty at academic institutions
are encouraged to apply. If employed by an institution of higher learning, an
applicant must not be tenured at the time of the application. An applicant for
the Murphy Prize should submit a packet containing the following items: 1) a
research project description of no more than 1000 words, 2) a tentative budget
of anticipated expenses, 3) a current curriculum vitae, and 4) two confidential
letters of recommendation in envelopes sealed by the recommenders. All materials
should be mailed to John W. Johnson, Department of History, University of
Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, IA 50614-0701 and must be received no later than
December 3, 2001. E-mail inquiries should be addressed to <John.Johnson@UNI.EDU>.
Notification of the Murphy Award winner will take place in early 2002.
J. Willard Hurst Summer Institute in Legal History
The first biennial J. Willard Hurst Summer Institute in Legal History
convened in Madison, Wisconsin from June 11-22, 2001. Co-sponsored by the
Institute for Legal Studies at the University of Wisconsin Law School and the
American Society for Legal History, the Hurst Institute brought together twelve
early career legal history scholars selected as Hurst Fellows to work
intensively with senior scholars for a two week period.
Lawrence Friedman, Marion Rice Kirkwood Professor at Stanford Law School,
chaired the Hurst Institute. The other senior scholars were Robert W. Gordon,
Johnston Professor of Law and Professor of History, Yale University; Linda K.
Kerber, May Brodbeck Professor in the Liberal Arts and Professor of History,
University of Iowa; Stanley I. Kutler, E. Gordon Fox Professor of American
Institutions at the University of Wisconsin, and also Professor of Law; and
Arthur McEvoy, J. Willard Hurst Professor, University of Wisconsin School of
Law.
The initial scholars: Professor Edward J. Balleisen, Department of History,
Duke University; Ina vom Feld, Max-Planck-Institut fur Europaische
Rechtsgeschichte; Douglas Harris, York University; Thomas Miguel Hilbink, Public
Interest Law Center, New York University; Gwen Hoerr McNamee, University of
Illinois Chicago; Ajay K. Mehrotra, University of Chicago; Dr. Stephen
Robertson, Department of History, University of Sydney; Marc Simon Rodriguez,
University of Wisconsin; Joseph E. Slater, University of Toledo College of Law;
Elizabeth Lee Thompson, University of Texas; Dalia Tsuk, James E. Rogers College
of Law, University of Arizona; Adam Winkler, University of California Los
Angeles.
The success of the Hurst Institute is reflected in the comments of the
Fellows. One described the presentation and discussion sessions as "an
extraordinarily valuable and intellectually rich experience. . . . . It was a
unique opportunity to think critically about a variety of theories and
methodologies of legal history, and learn about a number of new subjects within
the field." Another Hurst Fellow stressed the importance of building a
community of scholars: "The discussions we had were some of the best I’ve
had since beginning my graduate education. Our common passion for legal history
-- and especially legal history in the Hurstian tradition -- brought me newfound
energy and enthusiasm for my current work and my future career. To practice
legal history is a more interesting prospect now that I know that I undertake
the journey with these people as my colleagues."
The next Hurst Summer Institute is scheduled for June 2003. For information
about the 2003 Institute, consult the H-Law website at
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~law/.
Law and History Review
(from Chris Tomlins, Editor)
Members of the ASLH will have noticed (I hope) the changes on-going in the Law
and History Review. At the beginning of 1998, the LHR became a
three-issue journal – a change that everyone will have become used to by now.
The more observant among us may also have noticed that the size of each issue
has been increasing, to the point where we have adopted a new
"default" length of 256 pages per issue. Most momentous, of course, is
the appearance of the journal in a full "on-line" format under the
auspices of the "History Cooperative" <http://www.historycooperative.org/>
. The Cooperative is an expanding association of leading history journals formed
under the auspices of the AHA, the OAH, the National Academy Press and our own
publisher, the University of Illinois Press. The four founding partners have
funded the Cooperative extremely generously. As one of the first associate
members, the LHR is playing an active role in the governance of the
Cooperative and in its plans for further development. We hope soon to be in a
position to encourage (perhaps solicit) scholarship in legal history that takes
full advantage of the representational possibilities inherent in on-line media.
Meanwhile, we are taking steps to develop some new features on our own web page
<http://www.press.uillinois.edu/journals/lhr.html>, notably making
available details of forthcoming issues, and in some cases providing
"pre-print" versions of selected forthcoming articles in PDF format.
All these developments are testament to the increasing prominence that legal
history has attained in historical and legal scholarship at large over the last
ten or fifteen years. At the LHR we hope to continue that trend with our
next project, a major drive to increase subscriptions, particularly
institutional subscriptions. We hope that existing members of the ASLH will be
willing to give us a hand in the endeavor – recruit a new subscriber, or
ensure that your institution’s libraries receive the journal. We promise not
to bombard you with mail, but expect to receive some promotional material during
the coming year, and please don’t throw it away before reading it!
As always, the LHR expresses its gratitude to the American Bar
Foundation for its generous support of the journal’s editorial office.
Studies in Legal History
(From Tom Green and Dirk Hartog, co-editors)
Two Series books appeared in Spring, 2001: Charles W. McCurdy, The Anti-Rent
Era in New York Law and Politics, 1835-1865; and William E. Nelson, The Legalist
Reformation: Law, Politics, and Ideology in New York, 1920-1980. One book is due
out this Fall:Sarah Barringer Gordon, The Mormon Question: Polygamy and
Constitutional Conflict in Nineteenth-Century America.
We anticipate publication of another half dozen books over the two years,
2002-3, and as many again in the two following years. The editors want to
express their great appreciation to the University of North Carolina Press and
especially to Chuck Grench, Executive Editor at the Press, who has gotten the
Series's third decade at North Carolina off to a fine start.
Tarlton Law Library Legal History Series
The Jamail Center for Legal Research has launched the Tarlton Law Library
Legal History Series with an illustrated essay about an illustrated medieval
legal manuscript.
"The Illustrations of the Sachsenspiegel: A Medieval German Law
Book", is by Guillermo F. Margadant, Mexico’s leading legal historian.
Margadant guides the reader through the striking and unusual visual symbols used
to illustrate legal points in the Sachsenspiegel, or "Mirror of the
Saxons."
The Sachsenspiegel was originally written in the 13th century and was cited
in German case law until the early 20th century. It covered everything from
legal procedure to feudal law and family law.
The publication includes 16 illustrations from the Wolfenbuttel
Sachsenspiegel, one of four 14th-century illustrated manuscripts of the law code
which survive. In an essay that is both scholarly and entertaining, Margadant
shows how the illustrations and the text are intimately related, and how they
provide a window on society and politics in medieval Germany.
The author, a Professor Emeritus at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma
de México, was a visiting professor at the
University of Texas School of Law for over a decade. "Professor Margadant
has been both an active user and a generous supporter of our Law Library for
many years," said Professor Roy M. Mersky, director of the Jamail Center
for Legal Research. "As a result, I’m delighted that our Legal History
Series begins with a publication of his."
Margadant is the author of the standard textbook on Mexican legal history,
now in its 12th edition, and is an internationally recognized authority on
Mexican, Spanish, Roman, canon, and Japanese law. Two Mexican presidents have
honored him for his professional and academic accomplishments.
The Tarlton Law Library Legal History Series plans to publish a wide range of
texts, including historical essays, oral history interviews, annotated
bibliographies, and unique documents.
"If there is a common thread between Professor Margadant’s essay and
those that follow in this series, it is to show the importance of libraries and
archives for legal history," said Mersky. "I hope the series will
inspire others to explore the rich sources of our legal heritage, and to share
the riches with others through their writings."
"The Illustrations of the Sachsenspiegel" is published in an
edition of 500 copies. Copies may be purchased for $15 via the Jamail Center’s
publications website, at <http://www.law.utexas.edu/pubs/order.htm>, or by
contacting the Publications Coordinator (Publications Coordinator, Jamail Center
for Legal Research, University of Texas School of Law, 727 East 26th St.,
Austin, TX 78705-3224; phone 512/471-7726; fax 512/471-0243).
An insider’s look at one of America’s greatest Supreme Court justices has
been published by the Jamail Center for Legal Research, University of Texas at
Austin, as the second volume in its Tarlton Law Library Legal History Series.
"Inside Justice Hugo L. Black: The Letters", is by John P. Frank,
who began his distinguished legal career as Justice Black’s law clerk in 1942.
Frank drew on his file of 25 years’ correspondence with Justice Black, and his
notes on their conversations over the years.
Justice Black’s son, Hugo L. Black, Jr., said in his foreword to
"Inside Justice Black" that "This little collection shows the
trust and respect of each for the character and intellect and learning of the
other -- the kind of trust and respect that sparks unreserved dialogues for
truth."
Justice Hugo L. Black was one of the most influential jurists of the 20th
century, and has a place on almost any list of the all-time top ten Supreme
Court Justices. He is best remembered for his defense of civil liberties.
"Much of our Constitution today is Black’s constitution," writes
Frank.
Based on their conversations and letters, Frank paints an intimate portrait
of Justice Black the family man, the mentor, the jurist, and the civil
libertarian. Frank describes Black’s relationships with his colleagues on the
Supreme Court, including the "feud" between Black and Justice Robert
A. Jackson that allegedly arose when Jackson was passed over for the Chief
Justiceship in 1946.
John P. Frank has been named several times as one of the 100 most influential
lawyers in America by the National Law Journal. A noted attorney and scholar, he
has authored a dozen books on constitutional law and legal history, and has
taught in the law schools at Indiana University and Yale. He assisted the NAACP
in Brown v. Board of Education and was the lead attorney in the landmark Miranda
v. Arizona case.
The editor of the Tarlton Law Library Legal History Series is Michael
Widener, Archivist/Rare Books Librarian at the Jamail Center for Legal Research.
The publication can be ordered via the Jamail Center’s publications
website, at <http://www.law.utexas.edu/pubs/order.htm>, or by contacting
the Publications Coordinator (Publications Coordinator, Jamail Center for Legal
Research, University of Texas School of Law, 727 East 26th St., Austin, TX
78705-3224; phone 512/471-7726; fax 512/471-0243).
Tarlton Law Library Legal History Series, No. 2: Frank, John P. INSIDE
JUSTICE HUGO L. BLACK: THE LETTERS. Austin, Tex.: Jamail Center for Legal
Research, 2000. 102 pages. ISBN: 0-935630-54-6. Price: $20.00
^
back to top
H-Law
ASLH members who are not subscribers to H-Law, the ASLH electronic list,
should sign up to receive latest society announcements and other news of
interest to legal scholars. For complete information on how to join H-Law, go to
the ASLH/H-Law website: http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~law/
The web site has information about ASLH meetings, an index to Law and
History Review, past newsletters, book reviews, and an archive of links to
websites of interest to legal scholars.
Visiting Scholars, Center for the Study of Law
and Society, U.C. Berkeley
The Center for the Study of Law and Society, founded in 1961, fosters
empirical research and philosophical analysis concerning legal institutions,
legal processes, legal change, and the social consequences of law. The Center
invites applications from scholars with interests in all aspects of law and
social ordering/social change. Visiting scholars will be part of a scholarly
community that includes fellow visitors and a faculty of distinguished
socio-legal scholars in law and economics, legal history, sociology of law,
political science, criminal justice studies and legal and social philosophy.
Core faculty members of the Center include Robert Cooter, Lauren B. Edelman,
Malcolm M. Feeley, Robert A. Kagan, Christopher Kutz, David Lieberman, Kristin
Luker, Robert MacCoun, Daniel L. Rubinfeld, and Harry N. Scheiber. Among the Law
School’s faculty members who have conducted research projects in the Center or
are otherwise closely affiliated with it are Howard Shelanski, Linda Krieger,
Richard Buxbaum, Frank Zimring, and Herma Hill Kay.
Application Requirements
1. Applicants must possess a Ph.D. or J.D. (or foreign equivalent).
2. Applicants must submit a full curriculum vitae.
3. Applicants must submit a cover letter which specifies the time
period in which they wish to be in residence at the Center and which
describes their proposed program of research or study. Applicants must
pursue a program of research or study which is of mutual interest to
faculty members at the Center for the Study of Law and Society.
4. Applicants must indicate the source of funding while visiting
Berkeley, e.g. sabbatical pay, scholarship, government funding, personal
funds, etc. Monthly minimum requirements for foreign exchange scholars
are: $1600 per month for the J-1 scholar, $500 per month for the J-2
spouse, $200 per month for each J-2 child.
Among privileges and opportunities of Center visiting scholars are: library
privileges at the Law School and at all campus libraries; access to a weekly
luncheon-speaker series and other scholarly exchanges; other campus privileges,
including athletic facilities; and, when possible, assignment to shared or other
office accommodations.
The Center will consider applications for varying time periods, from two
weeks duration to the full academic year. Applicants should submit the
information listed above by post or e-mail to: Visiting Scholars Program, Center
for the Study of Law and Society, University of California, Berkeley, CA
94720-2150, csls@uclink.berkeley.edu.
Inquiries to the Acting Director, Professor Harry N. Scheiber, scheiber@uclink.berkeley.edu
are also welcome. The Center’s Web site is: www.law.berkeley.edu/institutes/csls/
^
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UNC Press Titles
30% Discount and Special Offers
Books in the series Studies in Legal History, coedited by Thomas A.
Green and Hendrik Hartog
(Listed alphabetically by author; discount prices in bold; some
quantities may be limited.)
Visit www.uncpress.unc.edu for more information and sample chapters.
The editors welcome submission of manuscripts for consideration by the
Series. Please send to:
Professor Thomas A. Green Professor Hendrik Hartog
342 Hutchins Hall Department of History
University of Michigan and to: 129 Dickinson Hall
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1215 Princeton University
Princeton, NY 08544-1017
Reconstructing the Household: Families, Sex, and the Law in the
Nineteenth-Century South
by Peter W. Bardaglio
Winner of the 1996 James A. Rawley Prize, Organization of American Historians
384 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $18.95 pa $13.27
Forthcoming!
The Mormon Question: Polygamy and Constitutional Conflict in
Nineteenth-Century America
by Sarah Barringer Gordon
Approx. 320 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa $13.27 (available
January 2002)
Governing the Hearth: Law and the Family in Nineteenth-Century America
by Michael Grossberg
Winner of the 1986 Littleton-Griswold Prize in American Law and Society,
American Historical Association
436 pp., $24.95 pa $17.47
Shaping the Eighteenth Amendment: Temperance Reform, Legal Culture, and the
Polity, 1880-1920
by Richard F. Hamm
Winner of the 1996 Henry Adams Prize, Society for History in the Federal
Government
352 pp., $59.95 cl $41.97; $22.50 pa
$15.75
Public Property and Private Power: The Corporation of the City of New York in
American Law, 1730-1870
by Hendrik Hartog
285 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
Heart versus Head: Judge-Made Law in Nineteenth-Century America
by Peter Karsten
512 pp., $59.95 cl
$41.97
The Anti-Rent Era in New York Law and Politics, 1839-1865
by Charles W. McCurdy
432 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
Southern Slavery and the Law, 1619-1860
by Thomas D. Morris
Winner of the 1997 Frank L. and Harriet C. Owsley Award, Southern Historical
Association
Winner of the 1996 Book Award, Society for Historians of the Early American
Republic
592 pp., $24.95 pa
$17.47
The Legalist Reformation: Law, Politics, and Ideology in New York, 1920-1980
by William E. Nelson
472 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
The Right to be King: The Succession to the Crown of England, 1603-1714
by Howard Nenner
356 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
The People's Welfare: Law and Regulation in Nineteenth-Century America
by William J. Novak
Winner of the 1997 Littleton-Griswold Prize in American Law and Society,
American Historical Association
408 pp., $59.95 cl $41.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
The Mansfield Manuscripts and the Growth of English Law in the Eighteenth
Century
(in two volumes) by James Oldham
1734 pp., $250.00 cl
Special price $150.00
The Republic according to John Marshall Harlan
by Linda Przybyszewski
304 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Protecting the Best Men: An Interpretive History of the Law of Libel
by Norman L. Rosenberg
380 pp., $22.50 pa
$15.75
Women and the Law of Property in Early America
by Marylynn Salmon
285 pp., $18.95 pa
$13.27
Laws Harsh as Tigers: Chinese Immigrants and the Shaping of Modern
Immigration Law
by Lucy E. Salyer
Winner of the 1995 Theodore Saloutos Memorial Book Award, Immigration History
Society
360 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $19.95
$13.97
American Legal Realism and Empirical Social Science
by John Henry Schlegel
432 pp., $59.95 cl
$41.97
Law, Land, and Family: Aristocratic Inheritance in England, 1300 to 1800
by Eileen Spring
A 1995 Choice
Outstanding Academic Book
212 pp., $18.95 pa
$13.27
The Transformation of Criminal Justice: Philadelphia, 1800-1880
by Allen Steinberg
Winner of the 1990 Littleton-Griswold Prize in American Law and Society,
American Historical Association; A 1991 Choice
Outstanding Academic Book
350 pp., $22.50 cl
$15.75
The Invention of Free Labor: The Employment Relation in English and American
Law and Culture, 1350-1870
by Robert J. Steinfeld
286 pp., $18.95 cl
$13.27
Inventing the Criminal: A History of German Criminology, 1880-1945
by Richard F. Wetzell
368 pp., $39.95 cl
$27.96
The Farmer's Benevolent Trust: Law and Agricultural Cooperation in Industrial
America, 1865-1945
by Victoria Saker Woeste
A 1999 Choice
Outstanding Academic Book; winner of the 2000 J. Willard
Hurst Prize of the Law and Society Association
392 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
30% discount on UNC Press titles of related interest
(Listed alphabetically by author; discount prices in bold; some
quantities may be limited.)
Navigating Failure: Bankruptcy and Commercial Society in Antebellum America
by Edward J. Balleisen
(Luther Hartwell Hodges Series on Business, Society, and the State)
344 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Religion and the Racist Right: The Origins of the Christian Identity Movement
Revised Edition
by Michael Barkun
Winner of Outstanding Book Award, Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of
Human Rights in North America
346 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Race and the Shaping of Twentieth-Century Atlanta
by Ronald H. Bayor
Winner of a 1997 Outstanding Book Award, Gustavus Myers Center for the Study
of Human Rights in North America
350 pp., $19.95 pa
$13.97
Beyond Confederation: Origins of the Constitution and American National
Identity
edited by Richard Beeman, Stephen Botein, and Edward C. Carter II
(Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture)
376 pp., $45.00 cl $31.50; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Under Sentence of Death: Lynching in the South
edited by W. Fitzhugh Brundage
344 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Radium Girls: Women and Industrial Health Reform, 1910-1935
by Claudia Clark
Winner of the 1998 Viseltear Prize in Public Health History, American Public
Health Association Medical Care Section; 1999 Richard P. McCormick Prize, New
Jersey Historical Commission
304 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $18.95 pa
$13.27
The Other Founders: Anti-Federalism and the Dissenting Tradition in America,
1788-1828
by Saul Cornell
(Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture)
352 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Before Jim Crow: The Politics of Race in Postemancipation Virginia
by Jane Dailey
(Gender and American Culture)
292 pp., $39.95 cl $27.97; $17.95 pa
$12.57
Lost Revolutions: The South in the 1950s
by Pete Daniel
392 pp., $45.00 cl $31.50; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Women before the Bar: Gender, Law, and Society in Connecticut, 1639-1789
by Cornelia Hughes Dayton
(Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture)
Winner of the 1996 Homer D. Babbidge Jr. Award, Association for the Study of
Connecticut History ; A 1996 Choice Outstanding Academic Book
400 pp., $59.95 cl $41.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Reading, Writing, and Race: The Desegregation of Charlotte Schools
by Davison M. Douglas
374 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
The Supreme Court and Legal Change: Abortion and the Death Penalty
by Lee Epstein and Joseph F. Kobylka
436 pp., $24.95 pa
$17.47
Interpreting the Free Exercise of Religion: The Constitution and American
Pluralism
by Bette Novit Evans
306 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Congress at the Grassroots: Representational Change in the South, 1970-1998
by Richard F. Fenno Jr.
192pp., $34.95 cl $24.47; $16.95 pa
$11.87
Lift Up Your Voice Like a Trumpet: White Clergy and the Civil Rights and
Antiwar Movements, 1954-1973
by Michael B. Friedland
336 pp., $49.95 cl $34.95; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Contested Culture: The Image, the Voice, and the Law
by Jane M. Gaines
Winner of the 1992 Katherine Singer Kovacs Book Prize in Film, TV and Video
Studies,
Quarterly Review of Film and Video
360 pp., $59.95 cl $41.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Lands, Laws, and Gods: Magistrates and Ceremony in the Regulation of Public
Lands in Republican Rome
by Daniel J. Gargola
(Studies in the History of Greece and Rome)
280 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
Southern Strategies: Southern Women and the Woman Suffrage Question
by Elna C. Green
A 1997 Choice Outstanding Academic Book
312 pp., $17.95 pa
$12.57
Closing the Gate: Race, Politics, and the Chinese Exclusion Act
by Andrew Gyory
Winner of the 1998 Theodore Saloutos Memorial Award in Immigration History,
Immigration History Society; A 1999 Choice Outstanding Academic Book
368 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
The Wages of Sickness: The Politics of Health Insurance in Progressive
America
by Beatrix Hoffman
(Studies in Social Medicine)
280 pp., $39.95 cl $27.97; $17.95 pa
$12.57
Papers of John Marshall
edited by Charles F. Hobson
(Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture)
Vol. I: Correspondence and Papers, November 10, 1775-June 23, 1788, and
Account Book, September 1783-June 1788
494 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. II: Correspondence and Papers, July 1788-December 1795, and Account
Book, July 1788-December 1795
583 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. III: Correspondence and Papers, January 1796-December 1798
582 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. IV: Correspondence and Papers, January 1799-October 1800
397 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. V: Selected Law Cases, 1784-1800
653 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. VI: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, November
1800-March 1807
612 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. VII: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, April
1807-December 1813
522 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. VIII: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, March
1814-December 1819
460 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Volume IX: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, January
1820-December 1823
440 pp., $70.00 cl
$49.00
Vol. X: Correspondence, Papers, and Selected Judicial Opinions, January
1824-April 1827
496 pp., $60.00 cl
$42.00
Property Rights and Poverty: Political Argument in Britain, 1605-1834
by Thomas A. Horne
296 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
Sex and Citizenship in Antebellum America
by Nancy Isenberg
(Gender and American Culture)
Winner of the 1999 SHEAR Book Prize, Society for Historians of the Early
American Republic
344 pp., $45.00 cl $31.50; $16.95 pa
$11.87
The Great Silent Army of Abolitionism: Ordinary Women in the Antislavery
Movement
by Julie Roy Jeffrey
Runner-up, First Frederick Douglass Book Prize, Gilder Lehrman Center for the
Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition; A 1999
Choice Outstanding
Academic Book
328 pp., $45.00 cl $31.50; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Ben Tillman and the Reconstruction of White Supremacy
by Stephen Kantrowitz
432 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Women, Crime, and the Courts in Early Modern England
edited by Jenny Kermode and Garthine Walker
224 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Beyond Regulations: Ethics in Human Subjects Research
edited by Nancy M. P. King, Gail E. Henderson, and Jane Stein
(Studies in Social Medicine)
296 pp., $39.95 cl $27.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Who Controls Public Lands?: Mining, Forestry, and Grazing Policies, 1870-1990
by Christopher McGrory Klyza
224 pp., $39.95 cl $27.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Colorblind Injustice: Minority Voting Rights and the Undoing of the Second
Reconstruction
by J. Morgan Kousser
Winner of the 1999 Lillian Smith Award, Southern Regional Council
608 pp., $65.00 cl $45.50; $29.95 pa
$20.97
Between Authority and Liberty: State Constitution Making in Revolutionary
America
by Marc W. Kruman
238 pp., $45.00 cl $31.50; $17.95 pa
$12.57
Contesting the New South Order: The 1914-1915 Strike at Atlanta's Fulton
Mills
by Clifford Kuhn
Approx. 368 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
A License to Steal
by Leonard W. Levy
288 pp., $39.95 cl
$27.97
Blasphemy: Verbal Offense against the Sacred, from Moses to Salman Rushdie
by Leonard W. Levy
700 pp., $22.50 pa
$15.75
The Establishment Clause: Religion and the First Amendment
Second Edition, Revised
by Leonard W. Levy
300 pp., $45.00 cl $31.50; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Laboratories of Virtue: Punishment, Revolution, and Authority in
Philadelphia, 1760-1835
(Published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture)
by Michael Meranze
352 pp., $19.95 cl (reduced price)
$13.97
Revenuers and Moonshiners: Enforcing Federal Liquor Law in the Mountain
South, 1865-1900
by Wilbur R. Miller
263 pp., $18.95 pa
$13.27
The Color of Work: The Struggle for Civil Rights in the Southern Paper
Industry, 1945-1980
by Timothy J. Minchin
296 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $24.95 pa
$17.47
Slavery and the American West: The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming
of the Civil War
by Michael A. Morrison
410 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $19.95 pa
$13.97
The Color of the Law: Race, Violence, and Justice in the Post-World War II
South
by Gail Williams O'Brien
(The John Hope Franklin Series in African-American History and Culture)
352 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $18.95 pa
$13.27
Worker’s Paradox: The Republican Origins of New Deal Labor Policy,
1886-1935
by Ruth O’Brien
336 pp., $39.95 cl $27.97; $17.95 pa
$12.57
Delinquent Daughters: Protecting and Policing Adolescent Female Sexuality in
the United States, 1885-1920
by Mary E. Odem
(Gender and American Culture)
Winner of the 1994 President's Book Award, Social Science History Association;
A 1996 Choice Outstanding Academic Book
288 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $17.95 pa
$12.57
The North Carolina State Constitution, with History and Commentary
by John V. Orth
216 pp., $24.95 pa
$17.47
Black Votes Count: Political Empowerment in Mississippi after 1965
by Frank R. Parker
Winner of the 1990 McLemore Prize, Mississippi Historical Society; 1991
Silver Gavel Award, American Bar Association; 1991 Ralph J. Bunche Prize,
American Political Science Association; 1991 V. O. Key Jr. Award, Southern
Political Science Association; 1991 Outstanding Book Award, Gustavus Myers
Center for the Study of Human Rights in the United States
272 pp., $18.95 pa
$13.27
Designs against Charleston: The Trial Record of the Denmark Vesey Slave
Conspiracy of 1822
edited and with an introduction by Edward A. Pearson
408 pp., $49.95 cl
$34.97
Struggle for Mastery: Disfranchisement in the South, 1888-1908
by Michael Perman
416 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $24.95 pa
$17.47
Buncombe Bob: The Life and Times of Robert Rice Reynolds
by Julian M. Pleasants
(James Sprunt Studies in History and Political Science)
376 pp., $34.95 cl
$24.47
Ida B. Wells-Barnett and American Reform, 1880-1930
by Patricia A. Schechter
Approx. 440 pp. $55.00 cl $38.50; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Representing Women: Sex, Gender, and Legislative Behavior in Arizona and
California
by Beth Reingold
384 pp., $55.00 cl $38.50; $19.95 pa
$13.97
Women and Law in Classical Greece
by Raphael Sealey
214 pp., $16.95 pa
$11.87
Hazards of the Job: From Industrial Disease to Environmental Health Science
by Christopher C. Sellers
350 pp., $49.95 cl $34.97; $19.95 pa
$13.97
A New South Rebellion: The Battle against Convict Labor in the Tennessee
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The Creation of the American Republic, 1776-1787
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