Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Cronan on the Patroon System and NY Landlord-Tenant Law

Liam Cronan, who currently serves as a law clerk in the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, has posted Rent, Riots, and Rensselaer: The Patroon System of New Netherland and Its Lasting Influence on the History of Landlord-Tenant Law:

For more than two-and-a-half centuries, a Dutch aristocracy thrived in upstate New York. Known as “patroons,” these powerful landlords controlled vast tracts of land, claimed by the Netherlands in the 1620s, and extracted rents from those lands well into the nineteenth century. Among the first and most influential patroons was Kiliaen van Rensselaer, whose interactions with colonial agents left behind a rich and extensive body of legal records. As these sources reveal, the patroon system’s unique constitution, derived from Dutch civil law, granted the patroon a seemingly feudal right with no analog in Anglo-American legal history: the ability to sell part of his land yet still require rent payments from his former “tenants.” Despite initial efforts to curtail it, this system persisted long after New York transitioned from a colony to a state, perplexing courts and lawyers alike for generations. After a violent uprising known as the Anti-Rent Movement failed to end the patroon’s claims to perpetual rent, New York courts faced a slew of cases challenging the patroon system’s legality. These cases exposed, and attempted to harmonize, the inherent conflict between English common law and Dutch civil law, which continued to shape New York law long after Dutch colonial rule ended, setting lasting precedents for property rights, landlord-tenant law, and the ability to bind property with perpetual conditions. But despite this significance, the patroon system has long been undervalued by legal historians, with most recent scholarship mentioning it only in passing. In resurrecting this neglected area of property law, this article seeks to impart a historically informed understanding of the patroon system and its enduring impact on landlord-tenant law. It will begin by tracing the origins of the patroonship as a tool to aid Dutch colonization. Drawing on careful analysis and translation of the records Van Rensselaer and his agents left behind, it will then demonstrate how the patroonship formed an interlocking system of property rights that provided patroons like Van Rensselaer with not only the right to collect rent but also to control his tenants’ labor, direct local commerce, broker debts, and even establish his own laws and courts. Finally, it will examine a series of key nineteenth-century cases and treatises, illustrating the nuanced legacy of the patroon system and its complex interactions with Dutch and English legal traditions. By connecting the patroon system to the broader evolution of American property law, from contemporary landlord-tenant statutes to cases on COVID-19 mask requirements, this article will reveal its lasting influence on property law and its rightful place in American legal history.

--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, April 8, 2025

Barbas on Originalism and Free Speech

Samantha Barbas, University of Iowa College of Law, has posted Originalism in Modern Free Speech History:

Contrary to what is often assumed, originalism has played an important role in our free speech history. During the 1950s, originalist interpretations of the First Amendment as prohibiting the crime of seditious libel became popular in legal argumentation, court rulings, and in popular culture more generally. The reason for the popularity of this argument was the Red Scare. Liberal lawyers, judges, and scholars deployed originalist arguments in their battles against government anticommunist measures. They argued that the original meaning of the First Amendment was the ban on punishment for criticism of the government, and that many of the government’s anticommunist measures were effectively a form of prosecution for seditious libel and unconstitutional.

This essay describes the popularization of First Amendment originalist arguments in the 1950s and early 60s, culminating in New York Times v. Sullivan. It explains how originalist First Amendment arguments came to be seen as an important liberal line of defense against government anticommunist efforts. Activists, scholars, lawyers, and justices on the left mobilized in a loosely affiliated sort of First Amendment “originalist movement” in an attempt to defeat the Red Scare. Ultimately, the essay suggests that originalism is a legal and social phenomenon that is intimately intertwined with culture and politics. Originalist ideas arise from multiple sources, including interest groups, intellectuals, journalists, lawyers, and ordinary citizens. The case study offers one example of how legal advocates and scholars in the mid-twentieth century deployed originalist arguments instrumentally, in response to the circumstances and perceived exigencies of their times. 
--Dan Ernst

Monday, April 7, 2025

Panel on the History of Administrative Law at NYU

I’m on a legal history panel at the NYU Law Review’s annual symposium, Where Does Administrative Law Go from Here? which will take place this Friday and is co-sponsored by NYU Law's Institute for Policy Integrity.  The other panelists are Joanna Grisinger, Northwestern University; Julian Mortenson, University of Michigan Law School; and Nick Parrillo, Yale Law SchoolNoah Rosenblum, NYU School of Law, will moderate.

--Dan Ernst

CFP: ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium


[We have the following announcement.  DRE]

The ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium will again convene a series of graduate works-in-progress colloquia during the 2025-2026 academic year. With the financial support of the American Society for Legal History, Notre Dame Law School, The Graduate School, and the Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government, the forum offers graduate students a valuable platform to present their research.

Dennis Wieboldt, a joint J.D./Ph.D. student in history, is spearheading the forum, which is now in its second year. The colloquium is currently accepting applications from prospective presenters, with graduate students in law schools and humanities departments encouraged to submit draft articles and express interest in presenting.

The ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium is currently accepting applications from prospective presenters. Graduate students in law schools and/or humanities departments are encouraged to indicate their interest in presenting draft articles here.

The convenings will be held on the Notre Dame Law School campuses in Chicago and South Bend in October and November of 2025, and then again in February, March, and April of 2026.

The forum will provide budding legal scholars and practitioners with feedback on works-in-progress—an important step in fine-tuning research to a point where it can be submitted for publication. “This graduate legal history colloquium is a wonderful way to foster new scholarship,” said Donald Stelluto, co-director of the Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government. “By bringing together talented faculty and students from several disciplines to engage each other as interlocutors, we, at the Center, hope that our support has the effect of forming lasting relationships as a community of scholars and a level of engagement that continues to elevate probative study of the major issues in legal history.”

“As the successes of this year’s workshops illustrate, Notre Dame is an excellent place to think seriously about the role of history in contemporary legal practice,” Wieboldt added. “I am excited to continue to welcome students and faculty from other institutions to engage in conversation with members of the Notre Dame community.”

The ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium is open to master’s and doctoral students, as well as law students. Students will have the opportunity to present works-in-progress at convenings of the colloquium, and each work-in-progress will have a designated faculty commentator. All works in progress will be pre-circulated to prospective attendees to facilitate a robust discussion.

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • A notice of the Legal History Consortium at Penn, led by LHB Blogger Karen Tani, with due credit given to Past ASLH President Susan Barringer Gordon, who was Professor Tani's predecessor as director of the consortium.  Also Professor Tani is among those faculty quoted by the Daily Pennsylvanian on teaching during Trump 2.0.  DRE 
  • The Reed Gallery of the Dunedin Public Library has mounted an online exhibition of its Mary Downie Stewart Collection, a collection of portraits and autographed specimens of New Zealand judges, some of whom I discussed in this.  H/t: MW.  DRE
  • The April 2025 issue of the Newsletter of the Historical Society of the District of Columbia Circuit is now available here.  It includes a summary of the recently opened oral history of Judith Areen.
  • Brian Leiter reports on the Oxford University Press's current policy on review copies (Leiter Reports).
  • ICYMI: Lorianne Updike Schulzke makes an originalist case against overturning Humphrey's Executor (Volokh Conspiracy).  Mark Tushnet on why he signed the HLS faculty's letter to their students (Balkinization).  Andrew Wender Cohen on the history of tariffs (PBS). The lesson of Loving for the Roberts Court (Minnesota Star Tribune). A Short Course in Justice: the Freedmen’s Bureau Courts (JSTOR Daily).  Ellen Schrecker says that the current assault on the university is worse than McCarthyism (The Nation).

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

Friday, April 4, 2025

Poole and Clark on Adam Smith's Concept of "The Federative"

Thomas Poole and Martin Clark have published The Fragile Power of Political Nations: Adam Smith’s Federative open access in Modern Intellectual History:

Adam Smith (NYPL)
This article examines Adam Smith’s concept of the federative: the double-facing constitutional power to conduct international relations today called the treaty or foreign-affairs power. We reconstruct Smith’s account of the federative from his major and minor works and demonstrate its importance in his account of law and empire. We first examine Smith’s early “internal federative,” where the power grows from the internal constitutional organization of the state. What starts as a democratic right to wage war and make peace becomes concentrated over time in the sovereign and its advisers as a “senatoriall” power. We then turn to the “external federative” in Smith’s later works, where the federative is redesigned as a power to unify colonial legislative bodies, connecting the familial sentiments of Britain and America, and forming a model for moving, slowly, towards the conditions Smith deemed necessary for international justice.

--Dan Ernst

Cai on Tort Law in Early Imperial China

Liang Cai has published open access in Law and History Review Absence of Talion and Tort Law in Early Imperial China (221BCE-9 CE): How Body Politic Cancelled Corrective Justice:

From a comparative perspective, this paper argues that early Chinese empires lacked the concept of talion or tort law when malicious violence or intent became factors. Instead, wrongdoers were required to pay fines to the government or received punishment as hard labor for the state. Victims not only could not receive compensation but were sometimes punished along with the offender if their loss was perceived as a loss to the empire. I argue that the absence of corrective justice in criminal cases can be traced back to the philosophical underpinnings of the body politic, a prominent discourse in early China that viewed the emperor and the people as a single, organic entity. When people were conceived of as constituting a unified, singular entity, criminal actions against an individual were interpreted as damage to the empire. Therefore, punishments for offenders were designed to compensate the empire, not the individual. Furthermore, in the context of the body politic, the suffering of both victims and offenders was regarded as metaphysically equal, which justified frequently pardoning culprits on a large scale to secure harmony within the empire. Originally, the body politic was employed to admonish and criticize the throne, urging the emperor to align his interests with the well-being of his people, but in practice, it compromised the practice of justice.

--Dan Ernst

Furstenberg on Rabbinic Evidence for the Spread of Roman Legal Education

Yair Furstenberg has published open access in Law and History Review Rabbinic Evidence for the Spread of Roman Legal Education in the Provinces:

A long tradition of comparative scholarship has succeeded to establish the impact of Roman legal environment on rabbinic law making during the first two centuries CE, particularly in the field of family and status. Yet, the specific channels for acquiring this knowledge have hitherto remained a matter of conjecture. This paper argues that the rabbis were exposed to the contents of the current legal handbooks. Tractate Qiddushin (on betrothal) of the Mishnah includes two peculiar units: the first (1.1–5) regarding forms of acquisition and the second (3.12) on the status of newborns. Both units appear in key points in the tractate and exhibit striking structural and conceptual similarities to extended portions of the Roman school tradition regarding the laws of status, as handed down in Gaius’ Institutes and Pseudo-Ulpian's liber singularis regularum. It is therefore suggested that these units provide the earliest literary attestation already around the turn of the third century CE for the dissemination of Roman legal education among non-Roman provincials in the East, who sought to adjust their local practices into Roman-like legal structures.

--Dan Ernst

Thursday, April 3, 2025

NCC Town Halls Announced

The National Constitution Center has announced several interesting online and in-person Town Halls, including:
    
The Future of Birthright Citizenship: A Constitutional Debate, on Thursday, April 24 at Noon ET

President Donald Trump’s executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship has reignited debates over the 14th Amendment and the meaning of citizenship in America. Join legal experts Amanda Frost of the University of Virginia School of Law, Kurt Lash of the University of Richmond School of Law, Ilan Wurman of the University of Minnesota Law School, and John Yoo of the University of California, Berkeley School of Law as they analyze the legal challenges surrounding birthright citizenship, explore the constitutional and historical arguments on all sides of this debate, and discuss its broader implications for immigration. Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, moderates. 

Democracy in France and America With Justice Stephen Breyer and Christiane Taubira, on Thursday, May 15 at 6:30 p.m. ET

The Honorable Stephen G. Breyer, associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (ret.) and National Constitution Center honorary co-chair, joins Christiane Taubira, former French justice minister, for a conversation on democracy, the rule of law, and constitutional traditions from French and American perspectives. Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, moderates. 

Executive Authority: Presidential Power From America’s Founding to Today, on Tuesday, June 3 at Noon ET

Legal scholars Gillian Metzger of Columbia Law School and Saikrishna Prakash of the University of Virginia School of Law examine the founders’ vision for the presidency, how presidential power has changed over time, and the key constitutional debates that have shaped the modern presidency. The discussion will also explore how the Trump presidency fits within this historical context and what it means for the future of presidential power. Jeffrey Rosen, president and CEO of the National Constitution Center, moderates.

The Story of the U.S. Constitution: Past and Present, on Monday, June 23 at 6:30 p.m. ET


This program is presented in partnership with the Sandra Day O’Connor Institute and the Organization of American Historians.  Akhil Reed Amar and David Blight of Yale University join National Constitution Center President Jeffrey Rosen for a sweeping conversation about the Constitution and the debates that have shaped America—from the founding era to today. They’ll examine transformative moments in American history and landmark Supreme Court decisions.

--Dan Ernst

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

Kim on Australia's Procedure Act of 1854

David Kim, of the Australian law firm Banki Haddock Fiora, has posted “A Turbid Admixture”: The Long Shadow of the Common Law Procedure Act 1854, which appeared in the Adelaide Law Review:

The innovations of the pre-judicature period continue to haunt us. In the 1850s, in response to agitation for procedural fusion, reforms were introduced to allow for the grafting of equitable remedies onto common law courts and vice versa. This well-intentioned blending of jurisdiction spawned two novel remedies that are with us to this day: equitable damages and the lesser known 'common law injunction'. This article explores the Australian jurisprudence that has coalesced around the common law injunction and surveys the difficult theoretical problems that come to the fore when attempting to define its nature and scope.
--Dan Ernst

Savarese on Parents' Habeas Suits in Late 19th-Century United States

Laura Savarese, Michigan State University, has posted The Origins of Family Rights and Family Regulation: A Dual Legal History, which is forthcoming in the Stanford Law Review:

The history of the state’s intrusions on the rights of marginalized parents has become central to today’s critical accounts of American family law and family courts, and rightly so. Missing from the conversation, however, is a full account of how those rights first entered the law, and how the state assumed its now-familiar, though often unfulfilled, obligation to afford due process to the parents and children it separates.

This Article is the first to locate that transformation in a now-forgotten wave of habeas litigation brought by parents seeking their children’s return from orphan asylums and juvenile reformatories—the institutions that comprised the nascent child welfare and juvenile justice systems in the late nineteenth century. Those conflicts are visible in archival sources and a set of state court cases that have not received systematic study. Drawing on those sources, this Article argues that modern understandings of the right to family integrity were forged through legal challenges to the state’s growing power to remove children from their parents, in the name of child welfare, from the Civil War through the Progressive Era. Parents, as habeas petitioners, pushed courts to recognize and enforce their rights to notice and an opportunity to be heard, to draw a distinction between child neglect and family poverty, and to affirm parents’ right to regain custody after they remedied the reasons for children’s removal—establishing the core legal principles that delimit the state’s power today.

Recapturing the story of resistance to the family regulation system, at its inception, offers insights for today’s efforts to transform or dismantle that system, and deepens our understanding of the genesis and function of constitutional family rights. Critically, recovering this line of cases provides a more complete account of the history and tradition in which substantive due process protections for family autonomy are rooted. This account also lends support to more ambitious conceptions of the right to family integrity, advocated today, as a tool for expanding legal protections against family separations and terminations of parental rights, as well as affirmative entitlements to state assistance for childrearing. At the same time, the records of parents’ legal challenges offer a warning about the limits of procedural rights and litigation as means of advancing parents and children’s interests, absent a more radical redistribution of public resources to meet families’ material needs.
--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Fisher and Shapiro on Storytelling, Rulemaking and Agency Expertise

Elizabeth C. Fisher, University of Oxford Faculty of Law, and Sidney A. Shapiro, Wake Forest University School of Law, have posted Storytelling, Rulemaking, and the Expertise of Administrative Agencies.  The paper describes and categorizes comments from the records of twenty-five recent rulemakings by twenty agencies, as well as ten dockets from the years 1974-1992.

For ill or good, the world is full of stories. Given the political stories being used to deconstruct the administrative state, it is easy to be cynical about stories and to discourage their use. But humans are story telling animals. Administrative lawyers need to be cognizant of that fact, and craft their understanding of administrative competence considering it. In this groundbreaking survey of stories in rulemaking comments we show how many different types of commenters are telling stories for a variety of reasons. These stories differ in scale and focus, and in their value to the rulemaking processa fact that underscores that stories need to be evaluated. Given that stories are how humans structure reality, build social relations, and persuade each other this is inevitable. As is the way in which humans have developed the capacity to evaluate stories. But administrative lawyers have failed to pay attention to stories and thus have missed the opportunities to encourage a more enlightened approach to thinking about rulemaking and administrative expertise. Such an enlightened approach matters now more than ever.
--Dan Ernst

Monday, March 31, 2025

A Month of Blogging About We the Men

I have really enjoyed writing about We the Men during my month as a guest blogger.

Here are links to my posts, in case you missed them the first time:

My website has additional information about the book.  Follow me on Bluesky for more feminist energy in anti-feminist times.

Happy Women’s History Month!



Lupu Remembers Steinem at the HLR Banquet

Ira C. Lupu, George Washington University Law School, has posted Gloria Steinem at the Harvard Law Review Banquet, which appeared in the Green Bag:

In the Spring of 1971, Gloria Steinem became the first woman to be the keynote speaker at the prestigious annual banquet of the Harvard Law Review. At that time, as an editor of the Review, I played an instigating part in the process that led to this controversial invitation. I attended the Banquet, and I paid close attention to the speech and its aftermath. In 1998, I decided to memorialize that experience in this essay, which frames the event in its cultural and political context – the rise of feminism, the Vietnam War, and American student radicalism, among other phenomena. In her book My Life on the Road (2015), Ms. Steinem draws explicitly from details in the essay in describing her experience at the Banquet.
--Dan Ernst

Saturday, March 29, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Lukasz Korporwicz, associate professor in the Department of Roman Law and vice dean for research at the University of Lodz in Poland, will speak on “Sophisticated Legal Tradition? On the Relation Between Common, Canon and Civil Law Once Again” at 7 p.m. on April 3 in the Thunder Room in the Jack B. Kelley Student Center on West Texas A&M’s Canyon campus. 
  • Hidetaka Hirota and Kevin Kenny will discuss the history of state immigration control and the first deportations of immigrants in “Receiving the Irish,” a YouTube Live presentation, sponsored by the Tenement Museum, on Monday, March 31,  6:30PM - 7:30PM ET.
  • The testimony of Amanda Frost at the congressional hearing "'Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof': Birthright Citizenship and the Fourteenth Amendment," on February 25, 2025 (SSRN).
  • In the Berkeley Talks podcast series, "UC Berkeley Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky and Brian Fitzpatrick, the Milton R. Underwood Chair in Free Enterprise at Vanderbilt Law School . . . debate the merits of originalism in constitutional interpretation."
  • A report of a session at the American Judges Education Institute summit devoted to The Collective-Action Constitution by Neil Siegel, Duke Law School (ABA).
  • "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History" is an Executive Order issued on March 27 that instructs the Smithsonian to purge itself of "improper ideology" and directs the Secretary of the Interior to ensure that memorials and monuments within his department's jurisdiction do not "inappropriately disparage Americans past or living (including persons living in colonial times), and instead focus on the greatness of the achievements and progress of the American people." 
  • Okay, then how about restoring Sojourner Truth and the greatness of her achievements?  An "episode of A New York Minute in History podcast commemorates Women’s History Month by uncovering the groundbreaking 1828 court case of Sojourner Truth, a self-emancipated Black woman who took on a white slave owner to free her young son from slavery in the South" (New York Almanack).
  • Legal historians Michael Klarman, Jed Shugerman et al. discussed Trump v. United States at HLS recently (Harvard Crimson). 
  • A notice of Cheryl Harris’s Mathew O. Tobriner Memorial Lecture, the keynote for the Racial Capitalism Symposium at UC Law San Francisco held on February 7 (UC Law SF).
  • LHB Guest Blogger Jill Hasday is in conversation with June Carbone on Professor Hasday's book We the Men at Magers & Quinn Booksellers in Minneapolis on Monday, April 7, at 7pm CDT.
  • Florence E. Allen (LC)
    ICYMI: Clay Risen reminds us that before Mahmoud Khalil, there was Harry Bridges (Bulwark).  Also that Arnold, Fortas & Porter stood up to McCarthyism (Politico).  The United States approaches its "Andrew Jackson Moment" (The Conversation).  That oral history project for government employees who lost their jobs (WaPo).  A profile of federal judge Florence Allen (at right) (CNO). Ezekiel Gillespie, a 19th-century civil rights pioneer (Milwaukee Independent).
  • Update: Legal historians of the administrative state will want to view the recording of the recent on-line symposium, How is Trump 2.0 Reshaping the Administrative State? convened by Penn's Neysun Mahboubi.  Participants include Columbia's Gillian Metzger, whose 2017 HLR Foreword compared today's "anti-administrativism" with that of the 1930s.

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

Friday, March 28, 2025

CFP: New Directions in the Legal History of the Civil War Era

[Via H-Law, we have the following CFP.  DRE.]

Call for Papers: 2025 Conference on the Civil War/Porter Fortune Symposium:

New Directions in the Legal History of the Civil War Era

The Center for Civil War Research and the History Department at the University of Mississippi seek papers for the 2025 Conference on the Civil War, to be held October 16-18, 2025, in Oxford, Mississippi.

The conference features a keynote address by Ariela Gross (UCLA) and a special roundtable with Cynthia Nicoletti (UVA),  Gautham Rao (American University), and Anne Twitty (Stanford University).

The mid-19th century saw a revolution not only in the written laws and constitutions that governed Americans, but in the ways in which Americans interacted with those laws and the people who administered them. The laws governing slavery and those emerging from it first tore the nation apart then posed significant challenges to its reconstruction. Americans likewise confronted severe legal questions as they prosecuted a cataclysmic conflict, one that brought the state and its armed forces into intimate contact with civilians of all stripes. Meanwhile, the changing ways in which Americans worked, moved, and understood their place in the world required fundamental reconsiderations of their relationships to government, capital, and one another–all of which necessarily involved the law.

This conference seeks to build on the work of historians who have begun critical re-evaluations of the legal history of the Civil War era. Papers may represent traditional legal histories, as well as military, social, and cultural histories demonstrating Americans’ encounters with the law. We welcome individual papers or full panel proposals exploring topics including, but not limited to:

  • The law and slavery in the United States
  • Efforts at or movements for legal and constitutional reform
  • Women, gender, and the law
  • Legal and political culture
  • The laws of war
  • Labor, capital, and the law
  • The law and Reconstruction

Interested participants should submit a paper title, 250-word abstract, and one-page CV to civilwar@olemiss.edu by Friday, June 6, 2025. Panel proposals should include a CV and abstract for each participant; a commenter and/or chair is not required. The Center for Civil War Research offers stipends to offset costs for presenters lacking institutional travel support.

AHA Briefing: The Federal Civil Service

[We have the following announcement.  DRE]

The American Historical Association invites you to attend a Congressional Briefing offering historical perspectives on the federal civil service. The briefing will take place on Monday, April 7, at 9:00 a.m. ET in Rayburn House Office Building Room 2075. 

Panelists Joseph A. McCartin (Georgetown Univ.), Margaret Rung (Roosevelt Univ.), and Eric S. Yellin (Univ. of Richmond) will discuss how the federal government’s bureaucracy has evolved over time, including who has been eligible for federal employment, significant legislation concerning federal employment, processes of federal hiring and how they have changed over time, and the role of unions. The AHA's James Grossman 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 brosenbaum@historians.org.

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 on are available on the AHA’s website.

Thursday, March 27, 2025

Pfander and Zakowski on Non-Party Relief in the Early Republic

James E. Pfander and Mary Zakowski, Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law, have published Non-Party Protective Relief in the Early Republic: Judicial Power to Annul Letters Patent, which is forthcoming in the Northwestern University Law Review:

Much of the debate over the constitutionality of universal or non-party protective relief in the federal court system has focused on lessons drawn from historical practice.  But with its emphasis on injunctive relief, the literature has largely ignored forms of adjudication that arose outside the courts of equity and led to judgments and decrees affecting the rights of non-parties. As a result, the story of non-party protective relief has not yet been fully told.

This Article offers a more complete story, highlighting a range of proceedings in which federal courts issued judgments that settled a matter once and for all and operated on all the world. Some familiar examples include proceedings in admiralty, where a decree could settle title conclusively and operate on those who did not appear in the litigation.  Less familiar examples include naturalization judgments, which conferred the status of citizenship on an individual once and for all.  We focus here on yet a third example:  the power of federal courts, acting under the patent laws of the 1790s, to entertain individual suits to cancel or annul a patent for all purposes. Such cancellation proceedings, based on a practice that developed in England on the writ of scire facias, were understood to operate as a general matter and could confer benefits on artisans and manufacturers who did not appear in the litigation. Patent cancellation remains a part of the federal judicial role today.

History suggests, then, that federal courts were understood to have power, when so authorized by Congress, to issue decrees that settled matters conclusively and therefore conferred burdens or benefits on non-parties.  Over the nineteenth century, the patent cancellation power migrated to federal courts of equity, resulting in decrees that prohibited patent owners from asserting claims against non-parties. These early examples of non-party protection make it challenging to argue on historical grounds that Article III of the Constitution bars federal courts from granting such relief today.  In a brief concluding section, we suggest that assessments of non-party protective relief should focus instead on congressional authority; such a focus could help distinguish universal injunctions in general from the set-aside power conferred in section 706 of the Administrative Procedure Act.
--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Ruskola on the Making of the Chinese Working Class

Teemu Ruskola, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, has posted The Making of The Chinese Working Class, which is forthcoming in the New Left Review.

This essay, forthcoming in the New Left Review, is an advance excerpt from a book entitled The Unmaking of the Chinese Working Class: The Global Limits of Capitalism, to be published by Verso Books in 2026. The title of the essay is a deliberate nod to E.P. Thompson’s classic The Making of the English Working Class. The English working class constituted the paradigmatic proletariat in the initial stages of industrial capitalism in the West. It provides an ideal lens for examining the emergence of another proletariat of global significance on the opposite edge of the Eurasian landmass, one that is emblematic of capitalism’s latest stage.

Thompson framed his analysis in terms of the Enclosure Movement, which expropriated peasants of their land and left them with no option but to sell their labor. In China, too, there is occurring a similar dispossession of peasantry that is sometimes described as a New Enclosure Movement. However, the two enclosure movements differ notably in their temporal and spatial scope.  First, processes that took place over a period of several centuries in England are being telescoped into just three decades in China.  Second, they are taking place in the opposite order:  the initial commodification of industrial labor in the 1990s was accompanied by a seemingly inexhaustible stream of migrant laborers into cities even without the large-scale commodification of rural land.  Why, then, dispossess a peasantry that has already submitted to capital voluntarily, i.e., under economic duress without the need to resort to forcible dislocation?  This essay, and the book of which it is a part, address this question by focusing on distinctive forms of ownership of rural and urban land in China—a legal distinction that has no precedent in Chinese history, Marxian thought, or Soviet praxis.
--Dan Ernst

Monday, March 24, 2025

The Unfinished Battle for the ERA

My new book, We the Men, concludes by exploring how Americans can learn from the past to change the future.  The long history of women’s struggles for equality in the United States makes clear that real progress has always required women to challenge prevailing certainties, advance uncomfortable demands, and confront powerful opponents.

I argue that America needs more conflict over women’s status rather than less.  Conflict can generate change.  Patiently awaiting men’s spontaneous enlightenment will not.

The last part of the book highlights some of the unwon battles that need fighting, or continued fighting, to push progress forward—now and over the long haul.  This unfinished reform agenda spans teaching, commemoration, political representation, legislation, litigation, and everyday life.

In this post, I will focus on the unfinished battle for the Equal Rights Amendment.  The required thirty-eight states have ratified the ERA, but the last three ratifications came decades after the expiration of the seven-year ratification deadline that Congress inserted into the 1972 joint resolution sending the ERA to the states. 

The crucial next step is to push Congress to embrace the ERA’s declaration that: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.”  Federal lawmakers should either directly recognize the ERA as part of the Constitution, remove the ratification deadline, or—ideally—both. 

Such congressional endorsement would make it more difficult for the Supreme Court to resist the conclusion that the ERA’s ratification is complete.  The Court has never denied recognition to a constitutional amendment that Congress accepts.

Even so close to the finish line, fighting for the ERA remains arduous.  Continued opposition to the ERA in Congress fits within a long history of vehement resistance to expanding women’s rights and roles.  The stakes are high.

Most broadly, the ERA could help transform how powerful and ordinary Americans understand the relationship between women and the Constitution.  Generations of legal authorities have excluded women from the center of constitutional law.  Indeed, Justice Antonin Scalia argued in 2011 that the Constitution does not prohibit sex discrimination at all because: “Nobody ever thought that that’s what it meant.  Nobody ever voted for that.  If the current society wants to outlaw discrimination by sex, hey we have things called legislatures, and they enact things called laws.”  Scalia added: “That’s what democracy is all about.”

This was never a compelling argument.  Men barred women from voting on both the original Constitution and the Fourteenth Amendment prohibiting states from denying “any person” “the equal protection of the laws.”   From that perspective, it is hard to see how abiding by what the men behind these constitutional provisions purportedly thought about sex discrimination would be a triumph of democratic legitimacy, rather than an importation of past injustice into the present.  But in any event, women are unquestionably not an afterthought to the ERA.  Adding that amendment to the Constitution would affirm women’s equal citizenship and women’s centrality to constitutional law.

Most practically, the ERA could help expand women’s rights and opportunities.  As We the Men recounts, ERA opponents have spent over a half century describing the amendment as simultaneously unnecessary and menacing.  The first claim has always depended on denying persistent sex discrimination and dismissing ongoing disparities.  The second line of attack has recently focused on arguing that the ERA would provide constitutional protection for abortion rights.  That latter argument has an ironic dimension: Abortion opponents ordinarily refuse to acknowledge any connections between abortion rights and sex equality.  But anti-abortion attacks on the ERA suggest the impact the amendment could have—eventually, if not necessarily with the current Supreme Court.  Embedding the ERA’s explicit prohibition on sex discrimination into the constitutional firmament would provide a new, sturdier foundation supporting feminist advocacy about constitutional rights.

— Jill Hasday

Smith and O'Neill on Younger v. Harris

Fred O. Smith, Jr., Emory University School of Law, and Peter O'Neill, Stanford Law School, have posted The Forgotten Face of "Our Federalism,” which is forthcoming in the Yale Law Journal:

Younger v. Harris is canonical in the field of Federal Courts, distinguished by its seminal role in federal civil rights litigation. The decision’s memorable exposition of “Our Federalism” produced the Younger abstention doctrine, which limits federal courts’ authority to address constitutional violations in state criminal proceedings. Today, this doctrine significantly impacts litigation challenging systemic illegalities in areas like pre-trial detention systems and child welfare programs. Yet, the origins of the case—a stark narrative of racialized surveillance, censorship, and police violence—remain largely unknown.

Through examination of diverse sources—including original interviews, newly acquired FBI files, press coverage, court transcripts, legislative records, memoirs, protest materials, and the archival papers of four Supreme Court justices—this Article reconstructs the case of John Harris, a Black civil rights activist and former SNCC organizer. While Harris’s Mississippi arrests in 1965 are clearly legible as Jim Crow oppression, his subsequent Los Angeles indictment in 1966 for similar activism became harder to recognize as racial persecution because it fell outside the Southern “Jim Crow paradigm.” This differential recognition helped courts maintain their image as champions against Southern injustice while limiting federal intervention elsewhere. Moreover, FBI files reveal extensive federal-state cooperation in suppressing Black political activism, contradicting Younger’s conception of federalism as “separate spheres.”

This case illustrates “legitimacy laundering”—a novel framework to describe the obscuring of canonical influential decisions’ original context and implications, conferring legitimacy on otherwise questionable legal practices. The Article also reveals how some modern courts have expanded Younger abstention beyond its carefully negotiated scope, undermining the doctrine’s origins in preserving federal courts’ power to prevent irreparable harm.
--Dan Ernst

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • Penn Carey Law’s notice of Dean Sophia Lee's recent article on "the evolution of Fourth Amendment privacy from weak pre-Reconstruction protections through its development over the years, culminating in Boyd v. United States."
  • A Q&A with Felicia Kornbluh and LHB Guest Blogger Jill Hasday on Professor Hasday’s new book We the Men in Ms. Magazine.  Her post on OUPblog is here.
  • The League of Women Voters of Pullman and Whitman County will host the virtual event, “History of Disability Rights” on 7-8:30 p.m. March 31 over Zoom (Lewiston Tribune).
  • James E Hurford reviews The Legal History of the Church of England: From the Reformation to the Present, by Norman Doe and Stephen Coleman (Law Society Gazette).
  • Stephen B. Presser review Jonathan Gienapp's Against Constitutional Originalism for the Federalist Society.

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

Friday, March 21, 2025

ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium: April 2025 Session

The ASLH/Notre Dame Graduate Legal History Colloquium will convene on April 5, 2025. Virtual participation remains an option for those who wish to attend. Register here. The schedule:

Registration/Welcome    09:45 - 10:05 AM  

Paper #1: Social Movements & Litigation Strategy    10:05 - 11:00 AM 

“In re Primus and the Rise of Reproductive Rights Impact Litigation”

Author: Christen Hammock Jones, University of Pennsylvania

Respondent: Mary Ziegler. Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law, University of California, Davis 

Paper #2: Legal History of Disability 11:05 - 12:00 PM  

“Bargains & Bandages: Administrative Regulation of Occupational Safety and Care Labor During the HIV/AIDS Epidemic”

Author: Beck Boorstein, University of Chicago Law School/Yale University

Respondent: Laura Weinrib, Fred N. Fishman Professor of Constitutional Law / Suzanne Young Murray Professor, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University

Afternoon Break (Lunch)     12:05 - 1:00 PM

Paper #3: Civil Rights and the Constitution     01:05 - 2:00 PM

“Due Process Decarceration: The ACLU’s National Prison Project, 1971-1977”

Author: Daniel Fernandez, University of Chicago

Respondent: Christopher W. Schmidt, Professor of Law & Co-Director, Institute on the Supreme Court of the United States, Chicago-Kent College of Law  

Paper #4: Legal History and the Welfare State     02:05 - 3:00 PM

“Policing Parenthood: Child Support Law and the Enforcement of Austerity in Late-Twentieth-Century America”

Author: Will Holub-Moorman, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School/Princeton University 

Respondent: Joanna Grisinger, Associate Professor of Instruction & Director of Legal Studies, Northwestern University 

-- Karen Tani

Fay, "Courts of Indian Offenses, Courts of Indian Resistance"

Alexandra Fay (University of Tulsa College of Law) has posted "Courts of Indian Offenses, Courts of Indian Resistance," which is forthcoming in the Michigan Law Review (2026). The abstract: 

In the late nineteenth century, the Department of the Interior created the Courts of Indian Offenses with the express goal of eliminating elements of Native culture through the coercive power of criminal law. The courts stood on dubious constitutional grounds, they were almost universally replaced by tribal courts in the twentieth century, and they have been widely derided as crude assimilationist tools.

This Article examines the Courts of Indian Offenses to study how law and legal institutions operate as sites of colonial struggle in the American context. The Courts of Indian Offenses were formally created to criminalize Native culture. In practice, they were more complicated. Native judges entrusted with Washington’s assimilationist designs frequently declined to enforce the “Indian offenses,” instead using the courts to resolve crimes and disputes recognized by their tribal communities.

The Article uses three decades of annual reports from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and archival records from three Courts of Indian Offenses to illustrate the structure and function of the courts at the turn of the twentieth century. It engages with concepts from subaltern studies, tribal legal studies, and law and colonialism literatures to explore how tribal law adapted and survived despite the formal imposition of Anglo-American legal forms. The Article ultimately suggests that the Courts of Indian Offenses may be understood as contested institutions through which tribal leaders preserved tribal self-government against the imperatives of empire.

The full paper is available here, at SSRN.

-- Karen Tani

Thursday, March 20, 2025

Jagodinsky to Discuss Habeas Corpus in the American West

[We have the following announcement.  DRE]

Please join the American Philosophical Society next Tuesday, March 25th at 12PM ET for our weekly brown bag featuring Katrina Jagodinsky, an Associate Professor of History at University of Nebraska-Lincoln and two-time APS Phillips Fund Award recipient.

Dr. Katrina Jagodinsky will discuss Petitioning for Freedom: Habeas Corpus in the American West, 1812-1924, which is a growing database of habeas petitions from county, state, and federal courts that highlights the remarkable diversity of legal protagonists and actors contributing to American legal tradition. Using digital tools and mixed analytical methods, Petitioning for Freedom documents surprising trends and suggests the potential for innovative research practices to uncover marginalized people's legal strategies over the long nineteenth century.

This will be an all-virtual Brown Bag at 12PM ET.   Join Zoom Meeting.  Meeting ID: 896 3862 0185.  Passcode: 006521.

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Cuenca's "Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval and Reformation England"

Esther Liberman Cuenca has published The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval and Reformation England (Oxford University Press):

Drawing on a quantitative analysis of hundreds of printed and archival sources from 77 towns, The Making of Urban Customary Law in Medieval England is the first cross-regional investigation into the history of urban customs since Mary Bateson's seminal, two-volume work Borough Customs (1904-1906). In contrast to English common law and church law, which both had long institutional and academic traditions devoted to training men in their legal philosophies, customary law constituted local practices that acquired the force of law over time. Urban customary law regulated political officeholding, trade, property holding, and even moral behaviour in English towns.

The Making of Urban Customary Law argues that urban customs, which governed the lives of people in English towns, were crucial to the development of a distinct, bourgeois identity in England-an evolution that this new study tracks from the early twelfth to the late sixteenth centuries. In the years following the Black Death, and especially during the Reformation period, this law became more concerned with defining political authority, maintaining morality, and articulating a consensus about the “common good” for townspeople.

This book makes two principal claims: First, customary law advanced the business interests of an urban oligarchy. These were urban (male) elites who drafted laws and obtained privileges to enhance their wealth and assert their political independence from local lords, and often made claims about the legitimacy of their privileges or laws by rooted them in history or some kind of ancestral past. These lawmakers also made considerable efforts to establish their identities as morally upright and even-handed patriarchs. In so doing, urban customary law played a central role in the development of a distinct bourgeois identity in medieval and Reformation England. Second, this law lent particular meanings to the “common good” in towns, as it helped these lawmakers articulate policies that cohered to their vision of an ideal civic community.

--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

LHR 42:3

Law and History Review 42:3 (August 2024), the publication of which was delayed by a cyberattack on the publisher last summer, is now available online.

Inventing Birthright: The Nineteenth-Century Fabrication of jus soli and jus sanguinis
Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, Sam Erman

The Law of Nations in the Diplomacy of the American Revolution
Benjamin C. Lyons

The Cartojuridism of the British East India Company
Sabarish Suresh

Between Empire and State: Haudenosaunee Sovereignty at the League of Nations
Kate Alba Reeve

What Happened to Nancy Jackson? A Riddle of Race and Resistance on the Southern Frontier
Anders Walker

A Christmas Eve Murder and the Notorious Georges: Community Identity in Northern British Columbia, 1913/14
Jonathan Swainger

Pathologization, Law, and Gender in Cases of Infanticide in Spain and the Netherlands in the Mid-Twentieth Century: A Comparative Perspective
Willemijn Ruberg, Sara Serrano Martínez

Witnesses for the State: Children and the Making of Modern Evidence Law
Laura Savarese

A Grand Jury Exhortation
Benjamin Keener

Anglo-Romano Common Law on Natural Subjecthood, Lansdowne MS 486 ff. 142–143
N. R. W. Dudani

Sources and U. S. Citizenship in the Antebellum United States: A View from Abroad
M. Scott Heerman

Book Reviews


Margaret McGlynn, The King's Felons: Church, State and Criminal Confinement in Early Tudor England Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2023. Pp. xx, 371.
Paul Cavill

Laura Flannigan, Royal Justice and the Making of the Tudor Commonwealth, 1485–1547 Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023. Pp. xv, 304.
Daniel F. Gosling

Corrigendum

“Let the Commander Respond”: The Paradox of Obedience in the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces – CORRIGENDUM

--Dan Ernst

Thompson on Mandamus and Democracy

Elizabeth Lee Thompson, Southern Methodist University Dedman School of Law, has published Mandamus as a Democracy Tool, which is forthcoming in the Denver Law Review:

Legal scholars recognize the centrality of state courts and procedures to United States democracy but the study of state proceedings and their impact represents a largely unexplored arena. This Article illuminates one largely ignored procedural area—the writ of mandamus, which is a centuries-old writ recognized in all fifty states that a court issues to compel performance of a duty by a court or public official. The Article examines mandamus concerning public officers—specifically governors and secretaries of state—through an empirical study of 497 state cases over the last almost two centuries.

The Article composes the first empirical national study of mandamus petitions seeking to command action by public officers. The central conclusion is that mandamus forms a valuable democracy tool for citizens, particularly for citizen-directed litigation aimed at pressing public officials to correctly conduct elections. This principal conclusion contributes to a range of insights, including the predominance of mandamus cases concerning officials’ duties to conduct elections and certify candidates—and how these election cases display how individuals employed mandamus to press their democratic rights. The Article also recognizes the related trend of citizens employing mandamus to assert complaints arising from initiative and referenda processes, a finding that underscores how mandamus repeatedly supported direct democracy efforts.

Moreover, the Article brings a new perspective to recent scholarship that notes an increased politicization and frequency of state court mandamus filings and the related area of original jurisdiction. In contrast, this Article—with evidence from hundreds of cases—uncovers individuals’ and political groups’ enabling use of mandamus, including through its somewhat increased use over the last quarter century. Although recognizing mandamus’s potential drawbacks, the Article seeks to establish and encourage the role of mandamus as an accessible and powerful mechanism to support citizens’ rights and hold public officers accountable to perform duties.
--Dan Ernst

Monday, March 17, 2025

Self-Contradictory Victory Announcements

Today’s post about my new book, We the Men, focuses on another form of forgetting in America’s dominant stories about itself—forgetting the work the nation still has to do.
As modern Americans, many of us have encountered people who announce or assume that the nation has left the sexist bad old days behind.  Still, I was surprised to discover just how early in American history those premature declarations began appearing and how important a role they have played in perpetuating inequality.
Wildly exaggerated accounts of American progress toward sex equality have been common in both everyday settings and legal institutions since before the Nineteenth Amendment’s 1920 ratification made sex-based disenfranchisement unconstitutional. These declarations are routinely framed in terms of American women universally, although white women have tended to be top of mind.
The stories forget what remains undone, even to the extreme of proclaiming that the United States has already achieved sex equality. For example, a 1918 textbook assured young readers that: “All men and women are regarded as equals before the law.” At the time, thirty-three out of forty-eight states maintained sex-based restrictions on the franchise. Although women had spent decades mobilizing for equality, discrimination against women at work, in marriage, and in every other arena was still legal and pervasive throughout the nation.
Judges have been suggesting or proclaiming that the nation has moved past sex discrimination for almost as long as American women have been mobilizing to challenge male supremacy. In fact, many of the judiciary’s sunniest proclamations about American progress have appeared in decisions denying women equality, as courts rationalize their rejection of women’s claims by insisting that women already have so much.
I call these decisions “self-contradictory victory announcements” because judges boast about America’s embrace of sex equality while simultaneously enforcing male supremacy. While women are not the only marginalized group to have experienced the judiciary’s self-contradictory declarations, cases perpetuating women’s inequality have long been prominent triggers for self-contradiction.
The Supreme Court continued its long tradition of self-contradictory victory announcements in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization (2022). This decision overruled Roe v. Wade (1973) in the course of upholding an anti-abortion law from Mississippi, the Gestational Age Act of 2018.
This line of argument turned on obscuring how far America still has to go. Dobbs never mentioned that men held 85.1% of the seats in the Mississippi legislature that passed the Gestational Age Act in 2018. Dobbs also did not mention that the Mississippi governor who championed the bill and signed it into law was the latest in the state’s uninterrupted line of white male governors. Boasting about women’s electoral and political power while ignoring these persistent inequalities made it easier to deny how politicians can endanger women when constitutional safeguards disappear.
— Jill Hasday


 

ASLH Prizes

[We have the following announcement from the American Society for Legal History.]

Each year the ASLH and the Cromwell Foundation sponsor a number of prizes for books, articles, dissertations, and digital  legal history projects. Scholars are encouraged to apply, and to encourage others to apply. Please note that in some cases eligibility criteria have shifted slightly from last year. Applicants should double-check the specific language to ensure eligibility.

All ASLH prize nominations (including self-nominations) are due June 1.

--Dan Ernst  The descriptions of the prizes appear after the jump.

Saturday, March 15, 2025

Weekend Roundup

  • To celebrate its 90th anniversary, the Stair Society held a legal history moot, according to Scottish law in 1851, a case involving wages for domestic service and an action of seduction (SLN).
  • Daniel Huslebosch, NYU Law, will deliver a virtual talk, “Confiscation in the American Revolution: Taking Property, Making the State,” before the Schenectady County Historical Society on April 2, at 7:00pm (News10).
  • The American Historical Association and the Organization of American Historians have issued a joint statement on "federal censorship of American History."
  • The Madison minimizers still have their work cut out for them, judging from this essay for Voice of America.
  • Law professors and historians at Willamette University "addressed the authoritarian tendencies of President Donald Trump’s second administration and debated historical similarities with European fascism" (Salem Reporter).
  • Members of the Women and the Law Division of Indiana State Bar have created All Rise, a coloring book on inspirational women in the state's history.
  • ICYMI: A notice of the first six months of the honorary historian of the New York State Unified Court System, former Court of Appeals Judge Albert M. Rosenblatt (LAW360).  Social Security Is Not a Ponzi Scheme, writes Lawrence B. Glickman (Boston Review).  Peter Neal says, No, Let's Not Bring Back Letters of Marque (Lawfare).  The Wisconsin Historical Society and the Barron County Historical Society are preparing a new historical marker on Ojibwe treaty rights and the “Walleye Wars” near Rice Lake (Barron News-Shield).

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

Friday, March 14, 2025

Jia on Constitutional Education in China and the US

My Georgetown Law colleague Mark Jia has posted The Possibilities of Constitutional Education:

Constitutional scholarship has traditionally focused on formal constitutional actors: courts, legislatures, and executives. These actors are often regarded as primary sources of constitutional law, or in some cases, as final arbiters of constitutional meaning. More peripheral in this literature are actors thought to transmit what courts and high officials have established. These constitutional educators, including law professors, legal journalists, and civics planners, are often overlooked for defensible reasons: they lack the normative authorities of formal institutional actors, and they do not exercise power as it is often understood in public law.

This Article advances a general theory of constitutional education to show what is possible through centering the output of constitutional educators. In an age of global constitutional change and local constitutional upheaval, constitutional education can shed light on basic questions of constitutional order. The analytic value of constitutional education lies not in studying it in isolation, but from examining how primary constitutional research subjects—texts, ideas, methods, decisions, and reasons—are refracted through a distinct set of downstream epistemic actors. Focusing on two case studies, the United States and China, the Article shows how the study of constitutional education can illuminate the functions of authoritarian constitutions, the construction of constitutional culture, and the dynamics of constitutional change. In so arguing, the Article also suggests that certain constitutional patterns may transcend divisions between autocracy and democracy, constitutions and constitutionalism.
--Dan Ernst

Shusterman on the English Standing Army Controversy and the 2d Amendment

Noah Shusterman, Chinese University of Hong Kong, has posted England’s Standing Army Controversy (1697-99) and the Origins of the Second Amendment:

This article explores the writings of England's Standing Army Controversy at the end of the seventeenth century, and the links between those writings and the debates over military policy during the founding era that would eventually lead to both the Constitution’s militia clause and the Second Amendment. Staring in 1697, a small group of British authors turned what had been a long-standing but undertheorized distrust of professional armies into an elaborate theory in favor of citizens’ militias. These authors argued that standing armies were inconsistent with a free society; that militias were superior fighting forces; and that maintaining a professional army would inevitably result in the army's leaders becoming despots. To prove their arguments, the authors used a combination of historical examples and theoretical discussions, drawing on Ancient Rome, Medieval Europe, and their understandings of what would or would not motivate soldiers. These writings became relevant to colonists in North America once the British began stationing troops around Boston during the buildup to the American Revolution. The ideas of the Standing Army Controversy provided colonists with a framework and vocabulary that linked Britain's action to those of other tyrannies, because of the use of professional soldiers against a civilian population. As states began issuing their own constitutions in 1776, several included language that grew out of the Standing Army Controversy, including the claim that "standing armies, in times of peace, are dangerous to liberty." These fears of standing armies, and the belief in citizen-soldiers rather than professional soldiers, remained the basis for the Second Amendment and for the broader debates it grew out of. The claim that a well-regulated militia is necessary for the security of a free state grew out of the writings of the Standing Army Controversy.

--Dan Ernst

Gallanis on Revolutions in American Trust Law

Thomas P. Gallanis, George Mason University Antonin Scalia Law School, has posted American Revolutions in the Law of Trusts, which is forthcoming in the ACTEC Law Journal:

American trust law is revolutionary. It departs in fundamental ways from the trust law of other major common-law jurisdictions, such as England, Australia, Canada, the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, and Singapore. It also differs greatly from the trust law of the major civil-law countries that have adopted the trust, such as mainland China and Japan.

This Article identifies five revolutions in American trust law. Each revolution is examined in its historical context and with regard to its lasting effects. Together, the five revolutions explain American trust law's distinctiveness. The Article's primary aim is to shape how American trust law is understood, historically and today.

The Article's contribution is as fundamental as periodization. We used to teach that the "Roman Empire" was followed by the "Early Middle Ages." This periodization was transformed by the pioneering scholarship of the historian Peter Brown. Professor Brown is credited with creating the field of Late Antiquity, approximately AD 250-750. Analogously, this Article's framework of the five revolutions is designed to shape our understanding of the history and development of America's distinctive trust law.

Part I of the Article identifies and analyzes the five revolutions. Part II offers a personal assessment of American trust law's distinctiveness. A brief conclusion follows.
--Dan Ernst