Monday, October 7, 2024

Legal History from the Ground Up

 As I mentioned in my first post, Family Matters provides a history of law reform across the United States. But it doesn’t do so by examining federal constitutional arguments or Congressional enactments. Instead, it examines law from the ground up. It focuses on reforms at the state and municipal levels, weaving them together to explain the transformation of American law writ large. 

In this post, I’ll explain the book’s methodological innovation, which is essential to its account of legal change. I’ll also discuss the research challenges this approach created—as well as how I addressed them. 

Focus on the State and Local

In Family Matters, I show that the impetus for national law reform came from scattered parts of the country. By working at the local level, small groups of motivated citizens were able to secure legal changes that would have been unthinkable in other parts of the nation. Many of the debates over and gay and lesbian rights took place in liberal cities like Los Angeles, New York City, and San Francisco. However, municipalities across America responded to these developments, which queer rights advocates—and their opponents—brought to local officials’ attention. Sometimes they did so with sympathetic laws that mirrored the actions on the coasts. Just as frequently, however, elected officials enacted legislation or policies that demonstrated their hostility to gay and lesbian rights. Yet even in the face of this resistance, successes at the state and local levels undermined conservatives’ strident opposition. These developments allowed for small scale experiments that made unthreatening queer families more visible. The conspicuous existence of these households, in turn, generated legal, political, and constitutional change at the national level. In other words, it was not that decisions in progressive enclaves represented national trends, but rather that they provided the foundation for widespread change.

By examining seemingly disparate locales and areas of the law, Family Matters demonstrates how they are integrally related, each forming a piece of a larger puzzle. What I reveal is that the causes of change in constitutional law and national policy often came from outside of the capital. Moreover, the impetus for change also frequently originated outside of the courts, where state legislative enactments and municipal administrative decisions often had little to do with the Constitution’s protections. Focusing on state and local advocacy efforts, as well as the links between them, demonstrates how many small shifts in discourse can make national change possible. As a result, the book showcases a broader array of legal experiments and experiences than analyzing federal developments alone.

Conducting the Research

Crafting this narrative required piecing together archival fragments and combining them with a range of other sources. Much of the information in this book comes from the records of gay and lesbian rights organizations, whose newsletters, memos, press releases, and other materials memorialized their work. Movement leaders, advocates, and community members also preserved pamphlets, fliers, speeches, and other documents that contained crucial details and revealed connections between events in various parts of the country. I gathered this information together, traveling to archives around the country thanks to very generous grants, including two from the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation. (Junior scholars: definitely apply for these!)

Once I had the primary sources, I began putting together the puzzle pieces in several different ways. For each chapter, I created three types of documents. The first was a standard word file, in which I put notes on the primary sources. That document allowed me to quickly look up the details of events. The second was a spreadsheet, which contained some of the high-level information from the sources. For example, for my chapter on child custody cases, I created a document on the custody disputes, which contained entries for the parties’ names, date, state, geographic region, court level, outcome, attorneys, amicus brief authors, and main arguments. This spreadsheet helped me identify trends over time, as I could sort it by date, location, and outcome. (Pro tip: excel allows you to sort your data by highlight color, so I often found myself color-coding the data in different ways to make the trends easier to see.) The third was a timeline, so I could see how the various types of legal advocacy—cases, legislation, administrative regulations, business policies—intersected.

That was step one. From this information, I knew what gay and lesbian rights groups had preserved—but that was unlikely to be a comprehensive account. As a result, I had to keep hunting. Step two was a general database search for the topics, to uncover additional evidence. That often yielded another few cases, statutes, or policies. Step three was more time-consuming. In the word file summarizing the sources, I noted references to people and places. If I didn’t have sources on them, I tried to track down those individuals and events, which I did through newspaper and magazine searches, as well as oral history interviews. I followed the breadcrumbs until I could not find any new references. That does not mean that I necessarily discovered all of the events, but it did make me confident that I had uncovered most of them.

The book’s chapter on domestic partnership programs in the 1980s is a good example of how that work paid off. These programs began as benefits for municipal employees in the early 1980s, before becoming a common option at Fortune 500 companies. The municipal offerings are often discounted as irrelevant, because the programs few and far between. However, I show that they were actually extremely consequential. Until these companies began offering domestic partnership benefits, no institution recognized same-sex couples’ relationships. Moreover, since these came from municipal governments, the programs opened the door to other claims for state relationship recognition. Finally, the municipal offerings inspired employees in the private sector to demand similar benefits. The end result was that large corporations began offering domestic partner programs. I could make that argument because I could trace the through lines that connected the people and events. Employees for large corporations cited the municipal programs and used them to urge their employers to offer similar benefits. They used data from the cities and counties to convince human resources personnel. The people involved in advocating for these programs spoke to one another, sharing information and insights.

I imagine you’re reading this and thinking: telling a national story from events at the local level sounds incredibly time-consuming. It is. The amount of time the research consumed was one of the biggest challenges in writing this book. In a later post, I’ll talk about how I wrote the book while on the tenure clock, which added another layer of difficulty to the project. But I think the payoff was worth the effort—and I hope that readers agree.

Before I open the can of worms that is tenure, I want to address a different challenge. Family Matters is a legal history, but it ends with a court case from 2015 and details legal debates that are still very much live. In my next post, I’ll take up the issue of the costs and benefits of writing a history of the present.

A Dialogue on Comparative Legal History

[We have the following announcement.  DRE]

Comparative Legal History: Dialogues on Alternative Conceptions of Comparative Legal History.  30 October 2024 - 17:00-18:00hs (CEST)

The journal Comparative Legal History is an official academic forum of the European Society for Comparative Legal History. It was first published in 2013 and aims to offer a space for the development of comparative legal history. Based in Europe, it welcomes contributions that explore law in different times and jurisdictions from across the globe. Submissions are currently welcome and are being assessed on a rolling basis.

The journal will host a one-hour public session to discuss on alternative conceptions of comparative legal history. Editors (past and present) will present exploratory points and all attendees will be invited to join in a general discussion.

Comparative legal history continues attracting new followers. Scholarship and changes in law school curricula are showing significant developments in this field, with advocates subscribing to this movement from across the globe. What explains this rise in interest in this field of study? And, above all, what is comparative legal history? What are the different conceptions of this tool for the study of law? How is this wave of scholarship and curriculum development related to other fields of study? These and other questions will be explored during this public session.

The event is free and open to the public, and it will take place via Zoom. Registration is required by sending an email to clhdialogues@gmail.com.

Saturday, October 5, 2024

Weekend Roundup

  • The University of Florida Levin College of Law has announced its inaugural conference on originalism, Originalism: The What, Why, and How?  It will be held Thursday, October 24 and Friday, October 25. 
  • On Tuesday, October 8 at 1 p.m. ET at the National Constitution Center, “Stanford University professor Jonathan Gienapp, . . . is joined by Stephen Sachs of Harvard Law School to discuss Gienapp’s challenge to originalists’ unspoken assumptions about the Constitution, the history of originalism as a constitutional methodology, and its role in constitutional interpretation today.”  Register to attend online here.
  • On October 8, 2024, from 7:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m., the Supreme Court Historical Society and the Washington Presidential Library will host, at Mount Vernon, “a conversation between American University professor Gautham Rao, Georgetown Law professor Steve Vladeck, and Lindsay Chervinsky, the new Executive Director of the George Washington Presidential Library” on “the history of the U.S. Supreme Court and politics.”  More.
  • On October 9, the University of Kentucky Libraries will welcome Judge Robert L. Wilkins of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, for a roundtable discussion, in which Judge Wilkins “will share how an entry in UK Libraries’ Notable Kentucky African Americans database led him to find his family’s stories in court records at the Kentucky Department of Libraries and Archives" (UK News).
  • At the National Constitution Center at Noon ET on Wednesday, October 16, Kenneth Mack, Harvard University joins David Greenberg to discuss Greenberg’s new biography, John Lewis: A LifeMore.
  • Caroline Burnham Kilgore, Pennsylvania's first female lawyer, gets a historical marker (Daily Times).
  • The Historical Society for the DC Circuit has published its October 2024 newsletter.  The contents include notice of a memorial celebration for the life and career of Magistrate Judge Alan Kay and the opening of an oral history I conducted with him in 1997. DRE.
  • Historical Society of the New York Courts has named Julia Rose Kraut its new Director of Programs, Education, and Research.  More.
  • Thank you, Helen Knowles-Gardner, for noting that the US Supreme Court has digitized and posted its Journal online!  As soon as she did, I used it and learned that in 1919 the Court granted Charles Evans Hughes's request that each side receive two hours to argue Commercial Cable Co. v. Burleson, before it decided that the case was moot and reversed Learned Hand's opinion below.  DRE 
  • The Right Honourable Richard Wagner, Chief Justice of Canada, previews the celebration next year of 150th anniversary of “ the only bilingual and bijural apex court in the world.”
  • Cambridge University PhD student Emily Rhodes delved into petitions submitted by women to the Lancashire quarter sessions courts between 1660 and 1720 ...  to get financial help for taking in parentless children” (BBC).
  • On her summer vacation from Syracuse University, Abi Greenfield compiled a dataset of about 500 political cartoons about the Canadian Constitution from five periods in Canadian history (Syracuse University News).
  • When University of Miami doctoral candidate Jordan Rogers is not working on his degree, he is the part-time curator of history at the City of Miami Black Police Precinct and Courthouse Museum.  In that capacity, he opened the exhibit, “Anything but a Slum: Miami-Overtown Before I-95/395.” On display until November 1, it “provides a detailed look into the history of segregated Black life in Miami in the decades before the implementation of the U.S. highway system in the 1950s and 1960s” (University of Miami).
  • "After five years of planning, a group of Shenandoah University faculty and students has unveiled a virtual reality experience called ‘the Great Experiment.’  [It] takes users to Philadelphia in 1787, where the founders of a new nation are creating the Constitution. Through the virtual reality experience, users get to visit the room where it happened" (WHSV). 
  • C-SPAN Classroom's lesson plan for teaching The Federalist Papers.
  • Lawbook Exchange's October catalogue of Scholarly Law & Legal History is here.
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.

 

Thursday, October 3, 2024

Introducing Family Matters!

Thank you to the Legal History blog for bringing me on board this month to share posts about my new book! I have been reading the blog – and the contributions from recent book authors – since I was in graduate school. I’m honored to join the ranks of its guest bloggers.

 

Family Matters: Queer Households and the Half-Century Struggle for Legal Recognition hit the bookshelves in September. Over the next few weeks, I’ll post about the challenges I faced in writing this book – both methodological and practical. But before I get into any of the details of how I wrote the book, I want to start by telling you what Family Matters is about.


Overview of Family Matters

 

Family Matters tells the story of a fundamental change in American law. In 1960, consensual sodomy was a crime in every state in America. Fifty-five years later, the Supreme Court ruled in Obergefell v. Hodges that same-sex couples had the fundamental right to marry. Over the span of two generations, advocates transformed American law from a regime that criminalized gay and lesbian relationships to one that recognized and affirmed the dignity of queer families. The fight for marriage equality has received considerable attention from academics and the media – indeed, I have a stack of books on it in my office! However, that campaign was only a small part of the more than half-century struggle for queer family rights. Family Matters uncovers these decades of advocacy, which reshaped the place of same-sex sexuality in American law and society – and ultimately made marriage equality possible. 

 

In this book, I highlight the legal reforms that predated the movement’s focus on marriage, rather than focusing on the fight for marriage equality itself. These changes transformed society, such that advocates could conceive of and pursue marriage rights. More specifically, I argue that changes to criminal codes and family law doctrines allowed same-sex couples to become increasingly open about their sexual orientation. The country consequently came to see gays and lesbians as both partners and parents. Battles to protect the community from hate violence also encouraged the straight mothers and fathers of gays and lesbians to become advocates for queer rights. By making public their love and support for their gay sons and lesbian daughters, these parents highlighted that gays and lesbians were embedded within traditional households not just as parents, but also as children.

 

The visibility of both types of queer families—the families that gays and lesbians created, as well as their straight families of origin—had a significant effect on the law. These households were consequential because they provided evidence of same-sex sexuality’s ubiquity and projected a new vision of what it meant to be queer, one that was centered on “conventional” domestic life. What this book therefore demonstrates is that “family matters”—issues relating to the family—were essential to the evolution of American law and the rise of queer rights. At the same time, family rights were crucial to members of the gay and lesbian community, for whom family mattered.

 

Family Matters' Arguments


I attribute the transformation in queer rights to three equally important causes. The first was a dramatic change in law at the state and local levels, where revisions to criminal code provisions and family law doctrines helped to reshape Americans’ perceptions of gays and lesbians. Penal laws during much of the twentieth century defined queer life as a public menace. Police raids on bars, arrests at cruising spots, and prosecutions for same-sex assignations all reinforced the public’s perception of homosexuality as deviant. Criminal law reforms in the last three decades of the twentieth century allowed gay and lesbian couples to interact in public without fear of prosecution. Changes to family law were equally significant. Developments in custody and adoption laws made queer-headed households possible, such that gays and lesbians became visible as parents. Domestic partnership registries, which emerged in the 1980s, revealed that same-sex couples were devoted and committed partners, much like their straight counterparts. Together, these legal changes allowed gays and lesbians to create “conventional” families—nuclear households comprised of caring parents and beloved children.

 

That a change in national constitutional law stemmed from state and local law is unexpected. For those familiar with legal change, the second source is less surprising: advocates were able to secure radical legal change by appealing to tradition. They self-consciously put forward a limited vision of gay and lesbian life that centered around conventional domesticity and an immutable identity. The movement’s emphasis on conventional households was an accurate representation of the lives of many community members whose legal battles shaped the movement’s trajectory. It was also strategically necessary given the strident opposition that queer rights engendered. However, these arguments also minimized that many gays and lesbians did not fit this norm. Advocates’ focus on families also did not address the most pressing needs of less privileged members of the gay and lesbian community, as well as those who deviated from social convention. Yet their appeal to tradition ultimately proved to be quite subversive, changing how Americans understood both same-sex sexuality and the family.

 

The third cause for the law’s transformation is more remarkable than national change coming from advocacy at the state and local levels, or a legal revolution deriving from arguments about conformity. As Family Matters shows, the crucial actors behind the transformation of criminal codes and family law doctrine were not just lawyers, legislators, and judges. As often, the central figures were social scientists, business leaders, social workers, police officers, teachers, school board members, and media consultants. These individuals did not necessarily see themselves as agents of legal change. Their efforts nevertheless instigated essential shifts in social perceptions of gays and lesbians, as well as the legal doctrines that shaped their lives. By helping to inspire changes in Americans’ attitudes and law, these non-legal actors helped to make queer family rights possible.

 

Family Matters is primarily a history of the gay and lesbian rights movement. But it is also more than that. The LGBTQ+ community has made enormous legal strides in a remarkably quick period of time. That is startling, given that the legal system is known for moving at a glacial pace, rather than lightning speed. Judicial decisions all too often deliver hollow victories, rather than meaningful social change. The movement’s history therefore raises an important question: how were advocates able to defy those conventions? At stake in these debates is whether the struggle for queer rights serves a model for the many other groups clamoring for their rights. What I show is that the gay and lesbian rights movement is distinctive, because historical forces beyond advocates’ control often shaped the law’s evolution. At the same time, the movement’s past offers new ways of understanding how reform movements are able to attain consequential legal change. The book’s emphasis on the state and local, as well as the role of non-legal actors and emotional rhetoric, offer keys to understanding the processes of law reform. This book is consequently as important to understanding the systemic manner in which rights become embedded in law and society as it is to understanding the state of the law around same-sex sexuality.

 

* * *


That’s the broad overview of the book’s main arguments and contributions. Next time, I’ll take up the first challenge I had to address in writing the book: how to tell a national story from legal developments at the state and local levels.

Hershkoff and Littlestone-Luria on History, Tradition, Standing, and Louisiana Law

Helen Hershkoff and Adam Littlestone-Luria, New York University School of Law, have posted The Louisiana Constitution and the Courts of Westminster: Standing and the Civil Law Heritage, which is forthcoming in the Louisiana Law Review:

A substantial majority of the Roberts Court now purports to rest constitutional jurisprudence on a legal “history and tradition” divined from the nation’s common law heritage. Leaving aside the question whether this approach should carry dispositive weight in interpreting the federal Constitution, this Article raises a different but unacknowledged concern:  The Court’s brand of originalism relies on a cramped notion of the nation’s “usable past.” Its myopic focus on our common law heritage erases other critical threads in the relevant legal legacy. In particular, the Article focuses on the civil law heritage of the Louisiana Constitution. As a first step, we interrogate whether the Louisiana court should automatically interpret its state standing requirement in lock step with the federal. We argue that the Supreme Court’s recent move to limit the kinds of legal harms that count as a basis for Article III standing in terms of common law analogues may cause serious distortion if it is mimicked by Louisiana’s courts. Since the civil tradition and civil codes play such an integral role as the source and definition of private rights and interests, a singular focus on common law analogs may warp the proper “history and tradition” that is relevant to Louisiana law. In conclusion, the article steps beyond the Louisiana context, arguing that the analysis carries wider implications.  Assuming that history and tradition must, or at least may, play a role in legal analysis, lawmakers and judges in each state should recognize the potential inherent in their own distinctive legal legacies. As a final step, we argue that the Supreme Court’s brand of originalism obscures the deep pluralism that marks the nation’s history and tradition—a multiplicity which standing doctrine should respect and even celebrate.
--Dan Ernst

Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Fede's "A Degraded Caste of Society"

Andrew T. Fede, of counsel to the law firm Archer & Greiner and the author of several other histories of race and American law, has published A Degraded Caste of Society: Unequal Protection of the Law as a Badge of Slavery in the Southern Legal Studies series at the University of Georgia Press:

A Degraded Caste of Society traces the origins of twenty-first-century cases of interracial violence to the separate and unequal protection principles of the criminal law of enslavement in the southern United States. Andrew T. Fede explains how antebellum appellate court opinions and statutes, when read in a context that includes newspaper articles and trial court and census records, extended this doctrine to the South’s free Black people, consigning them to what South Carolina justice John Belton O’Neall called “a degraded caste of society,” in which they were “in no respect, on a perfect equality with the white man.”

This written law either criminalized Black insolence or privileged private white interracial violence, which became a badge of slavery that continued to influence the law in action, contrary to the Constitution’s mandate of equal protection of the criminal law. The U.S. Supreme Court enabled this denial of equal justice, as did Congress, which did not make all private white racially motivated violence a crime until 2009, when it adopted the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act.

Fede’s analysis supports that law’s constitutionality under the Thirteenth Amendment, while suggesting why—during the Jim Crow era and beyond—equal protection of the criminal law was not always realized, and why the curse of interracial violence has been a lingering badge of slavery.
Here are some endorsements:

A Degraded Caste of Society does a remarkable job of taking a seemingly narrow dimension of the law and race relations to reveal a much broader argument about the antebellum South.
—Mark Tushnet, author of The Constitution of the United States of America: A Contextual Analysis

Andrew T. Fede offers a wealth of valuable research regarding how slavery shaped American law in practice.
—Jeannine Marie DeLombard, author of In the Shadow of the Gallows: Race, Crime, and American Civic Identity

This compelling account traces the modern-day legitimization of racial violence to its foundation in antebellum law; Andrew Fede brilliantly demonstrates that the arc of slavery is indeed long.

—Jenny Bourne Wahl, author of The Bondsman’s Burden: An Economic Analysis of the Common Law of Southern Slavery

--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, October 1, 2024

Welcome to Guest Blogger Marie-Amélie George!

We are delighted to welcome Professor Marie-Amélie George to the blog for the month of October. Cribbing here from her Wake Forest Law faculty bio -- 

Marie-Amélie George (WF Law)
Marie-Amélie George specializes in LGBTQ rights and teaches courses on civil procedure and family law. As a historian, she analyzes both how and why laws have changed, as well as the ways in which history can provide insight into current legal debates and contemporary normative questions. Professor George's work has been published or is forthcoming in the Northwestern Law Review, Florida Law Review, Wisconsin Law Review, Alabama Law Review, Yale Law & Policy Review, Harvard Civil-Rights Civil-Liberties Law Review, and Law & History Review, among others. She is a three-time recipient of the Dukeminier Award, which recognizes the country's most influential sexual orientation and gender identity scholarship. In 2021, she received the law school's Jurist Excellence in Teaching Award.
Prior to joining the Wake faculty, Professor George was the Berger-Howe Fellow in Legal History at Harvard Law School. She also served as an Associate in Law at Columbia Law School, where she taught the Sexuality and Gender Law Clinic and a course on legal research and writing. Before entering academia, Professor George worked as a prosecutor at the Miami State Attorney's Office and as a litigation associate at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison in New York.

Professor George received her Ph.D. in history with distinction from Yale University, and her J.D. from Columbia Law School, where she was Editor-in-Chief of the Columbia Journal of Gender and Law and a Kent Scholar. She also holds a M.St. in Women's Studies from the University of Oxford, where she was awarded a distinction on her thesis.

George is also the author of the just-published Family Matters: Queer Households and the Half-Century Struggle for Legal Recognition (Cambridge University Press). About the book:

In 1960, consensual sodomy was a crime in every state in America. Fifty-five years later, the Supreme Court ruled that same-sex couples had the fundamental right to marry. In the span of two generations, American law underwent a dramatic transformation. Though the fight for marriage equality has received a considerable amount of attention from scholars and the media, it was only a small part of the more than half-century struggle for queer family rights. Family Matters uncovers these decades of advocacy, which reshaped the place of same-sex sexuality in American law and society – and ultimately made marriage equality possible. This book, however, is more than a history of queer rights. Marie-Amélie George reveals that national legal change resulted from shifts at the state and local levels, where the central figures were everyday people without legal training. Consequently, she offers a new way of understanding how minority groups were able to secure meaningful legal change.

Advance praise for Family Matters:

"The legalization of same-sex marriage can only be understood as something that happened ‘fast’ by ignoring the critical history this book traces. Family Matters probes the ‘unknown decades’ of legal (and extra-legal) advocacy for LGBT families in the years before same-sex marriage. Among its many fascinating insights is the role that straight as well as gay families played. This is an expansive and important work of scholarship, and one that should be widely read." -- Margot Canaday

"Fluidly narrated and marvelously detailed, this is a history of ordinary people transforming law and culture bit by bit as they struggled to gain queer family rights. The book’s focus on the local and state level illuminates the surprising centrality of parent-child relationships in the gradual attainment of gay rights, long before marriage equality became possible." -- Nancy F. Cott - author of Public Vows: A History of Marriage and the Nation

"Beginning with battles over the criminalization of queer life and ending with the recognition of same-sex marriage, this important and ambitious book tracks an extraordinary transformation in American law. Family Matters offers an incisive analysis of one of the most consequential shifts in the legal landscape of the last half-century." -- Regina Kunzel

Look out for a series of posts from Professor George over the next several weeks.

-- Karen Tani

Legal History at Queen Mary University of London

The Department of Law, Queen Mary University of London, has announced three upcoming events of interest to legal historians.  All are free and everyone is welcomed.

16 October
Law, Labour, and Economy in the 19th Century
With Jonathan Connolly, Bronwen Everill, Erik Mathisen, and Miles Ogborn

23 October
The Devil in Medieval Legal Culture
With Karl Shoemaker

20 November
Law, Logic, Literature: A Symposium on "The Logical Renaissance"
With Katrin Ettenhuber, Kevin Killeen, Lorna Hutson, Julie Stone Peters, and Maksymilian Del Mar

--Dan Ernst

Monday, September 30, 2024

Call for Applications: Lapidus Fellowship for the Study of Rare Early American Legal Texts

Via the William & Mary Law School and the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture, we have the following call for applications, for the Lapidus Fellowship for the Study of Rare Early American Legal Texts

The William & Mary Law School and the Omohundro Institute of Early American History & Culture (OI) are pleased to offer a one-month visiting fellowship for scholars—from advanced graduate students to senior scholars—with strong interests in early American legal history. Fellows must make use of some of the resources included in the collection of rare books donated to the Wolf Law Library at W&M by Sid Lapidus as part of the exhibition “British and Colonial Antecedents of American Liberties” (October 1, 2019 through March 15, 2020). A full listing of those books can be found HERE.  

In addition to access to the rare book collection and proximity to a number of other Virginia research institutions—including the St. George Tucker collection and other items in Special Collections at W&M’s Swem Library, the Rockefeller Library at Colonial Williamsburg, the Library of Virginia, and the Virginia Museum of History and Culture—the fellowship provides the opportunity to experience the OI’s editorial expertise and intellectual community of early Americanists and the archive expertise of the Wolf Law Library staff. 

Fellowships carry a stipend of $2,500. Fellows are expected to make their own travel and lodging arrangements for a research period in Williamsburg that lasts between one and four weeks as the scholar deems necessary. While fellows are not required to use their fellowship funds during the summer months, they are encouraged to do so if they intend to stay in Williamsburg for a prolonged period. Modest housing on the campus of W&M is available during the months of June and July at below-market rates.

More information is available here.

-- Karen Tani (h/t Jessica Lowe)

Saturday, September 28, 2024

Weekend Roundup

  • The recording of that interview of Robert Post, on his Holmes Devise volume, The Taft Court: Making Law for a Divided Nation, by William M. Treanor is here.   
  • On Tuesday, October 1, at 11:30 a.m., Esteban Llamosas (National University of Córdoba), will speak on Economía Política (y católica) en la enseñanza jurídica cordobesa: traducción del liberalismo en la Universidad de Córdoba (Argentina) en la segunda mitad del siglo XIX, in the Legal History Colloquium of the law faculty of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.  It will take place in Seminar IV and may be viewed via Zoom.  (Meeting ID: 829 1079 8716 / Access Code: 609743).
  • The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth will hold a book launch for South Asia, the British Empire, and the Rise of Classical Legal Thought: Towards a Historical Ontology of the Law, by Faisal Chaudhry, on Friday, October 04, 2024 at 12:00pm to 1:15pm in the Law School Moot Court Room.  The event will be bring together historians of South Asia (Tiraana Bains, Osama Siddiqui, and Sana Haroon) and Duncan Kennedy. Danya Reda, Wayne State Law, will moderate.  For Zoom access to the event, contact hfern@umassd.edu. 
  • Also on Friday, October 4, the Library of Congress and the Supreme Court Historical Society will commemorate the career of Sandra Day O’Connor with the panel Center Court: Justice Sandra day O’Connor and the Supreme Court.  It will take place in the Montpelier Room 101 in the James Madison Building of the Library of Congress from 4:30 with a panel starting at 5:00. The panelists are Neomi Rao, Julie Rose O’Sullivan, Joan Biskupic, and Theodore OlsonKimberly Atkins Stohr will moderate.  YouTube coverage is here.  Register to attend here.
  • "Sylvia Mendez was just eight when she became part of a landmark school desegregation case that helped pave the way for the famous Brown v. Board ruling a decade later." The blog of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts tells the story of Mendez v. Westminster in a new Moments in History video.  
  • Grace Mallon has been appointed to the Clive Holmes Fellowship in History at Lady Margaret Hall.  More.
  • "The Historical Society of the New York Courts has named Allison M. Morey as its new Executive Director."  More
  • "In celebration of Constitution Day and the five-year anniversary of the Library of Congress website, the Constitution Annotated online, the Library of Congress is launching “Our Constitution,” a monthly podcast series that introduces listeners to the foundational legal document of the United States and how the nation’s charter has been interpreted over time."   More.
  • Years ago, my then-colleagues Richard Chused and Wendy W. Williams taught a legendary seminar on Women's Legal History at Georgetown Law.  I had to smile, then, when I saw that Susan Damplo, one of their students in the 1987 offering of the seminar and now a New-York-City based lawyer, just posted the paper she wrote then to SSRN.  It is Federally Sponsored Childcare During World War II: An Idea Before Its Time.  DRE.
  • ICYMI: Rare Copy of U.S. Constitution, Found in a File Cabinet, Is Up for Auction (NYT).  ABA will bring lawyers to the UK to celebrate historic 1924 visit (ABAJ).  Linda Colley reviews The Cambridge Constitutional History of the United Kingdom (NYRB). Cass Sunstein reviews Jonathan Gienapp's Against Constitutional Originalism: A Historical Critique (WaPo). "Originalism Was Impossible," says Eric L. Muller (The Atlantic).

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

Friday, September 27, 2024

Balkin on "Cafeteria Originalism"

Jack Balkin, Yale Law School, has posted We Are All Cafeteria Originalists Now (and We Always Have Been), which is forthcoming in the William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal:

Americans are “cafeteria originalists." They pick and choose when to follow the views of the founders, framers, or adopters (as they understand them) and often artfully re-characterize these views to support contemporary political and legal arguments. Even self-described originalist judges are originalist only when they want to be.

Cafeteria originalism is not a pathology or a falling away from a pure or correct version of constitutional interpretation. Instead, the persistence of cafeteria originalism in American constitutional culture reveals the deep rhetorical structure of American constitutional law. That is why non-originalists make originalist arguments all the time without thereby being converted to the originalist creed. And that is why conservative originalists have always had to leaven their theories with qualifications, exceptions, and epicycles.

Cafeteria originalism is our law. The most plausible versions of interpretive theory — including the most plausible versions of originalism — make their peace with cafeteria originalism; indeed, they enjoy the smorgasbord. Cafeteria originalism has multiple uses in American legal thought. It offers a powerful rhetoric for legal reform. It clears the ground for new doctrinal development. And it helps people express their contemporary values through appeals to constitutional memory.

Interpretive theories lie downstream from constitutional culture. Within that culture, originalist arguments are simply one element of a larger collection of rhetorical strategies. This produces the effect called cafeteria originalism. From the standpoint of conservative originalism, this fact is a problem. But from the standpoint of American constitutional culture, it is perfectly normal. It is just what we do around here.
--Dan Ernst

Tomlins's "Legal History/History of Law at Berkeley"

Christopher L. Tomlins, Berkeley Law, has written, as a digital "flipbook," Legal History/History of Law at Berkeley, 1870-2024.  Presently it resides here, although in time it might migrate to California Digital Library.  (For good measure, we're putting a QR code at right.)  

Here is Professor Tomlins's introduction:

As a field of study and practice in the modern university, history has always balanced, somewhat uneasily, between the humanities and the social sciences. The same is true of law. Is law art or science? Is it formed in the cloister of knowledge or the forensics of action?

Now put these two fields together. Legal history. Legal history purports to study the history of law – of legal discourse, and legal institutions, and legal cultures, and of the circumstances in and by which they are formed. Is this art studying art, or science studying science? Both?

At Berkeley, history and law have been entangled in one fashion or another virtually since the creation of the University of California in 1868, so this question – what is the connotation of “legal history”? – should always have been ripe for a response at the university, whether from among the academic lawyers of the law school or the scholarly historians of the history department. Instead, despite (or more likely because of) their original entanglement, each party mostly preferred to go its own way. 

But developments at the law school in the 1960s and 1970s made their encounter unavoidable. First came the creation of an interdisciplinary “Center for the Study of Law and Society” (CSLS); then a PhD  program called “Jurisprudence and Social Policy” (JSP), followed by an undergraduate “Legal Studies” program. Separately, but parallel to these developments, the law school became host to an extraordinary manuscript and rare book archive, the Robbins Collection, which made it a home (whether or not it wished to be) for ancient and medieval legal history, and the history of law and religion.

Legal History/History of Law at Berkeley, 1870-2024 is an account of the entanglement of history with law at Berkeley, both before and after the arrival of “law and society.” It describes how legal history at Berkeley was incubated in the law school. This came about despite the law school’s central institutional imperatives (its pedagogical and professional emphasis on training lawyers), but also partly in reputational tandem with those imperatives (the scholarly achievements of various high-profile faculty members, the development of its world-renowned rare book and manuscript archive). In substance, these roots meant that as it developed, legal history at Berkeley Law sprawled widely – beyond the history of the United States and beyond the practical context of “recent” history.

The creation of JSP in the mid-1970s did not mean any sudden new departure from these tendencies. Still, we will see that much would change in the fifty years following the program’s inception. JSP added a new and valuable center of orientation, with its own problems and possibilities to work out. Most important, it added graduate students. In the field of legal history it added emphasis on the United States where before there had been little, while simultaneously helping to ensure that Berkeley’s legal history would be deeply interdisciplinary – as one can tell from the dissertations written and from the careers pursued. This essential plurality of purpose would eventually become the character of legal history elsewhere on campus, in the History Department and beyond.

Over time, trends in legal scholarship, trends in historical scholarship, and the temptations and rewards of interdisciplinarity have slowly created a contemporary intellectual world at Berkeley in which legal history – the history of law and legal institutions, of legal discourse, and legal cultures, and legalities – has never been better served by a greater range of Berkeley scholars, campus-wide, than it is now. Legal History/History of Law at Berkeley, 1870-2024 tells the story of how this came to be.

--Dan Ernst

Thursday, September 26, 2024

NAACP Legal Defense Records Now Online

[We have the following announcement from the Library of Congress.  H/t: JQB.  DRE]

NAACP Legal Defense Fund Records Newly Digitized and Now Available Online from the Library of Congress

A major portion of the processed records of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund are now available online for the first time from the Library of Congress.

Spanning the years 1915-1968, with most dating from 1940 to 1960, these records document the organization’s work as it combated racial discrimination in the nation’s courts, establishing in the process a public interest legal practice that was unprecedented in American jurisprudence.

About 80% of the approximately 80,000 items have been digitized thus far resulting in approximately 210,300 images in the digital collection. The digitization will greatly expand research access to this significant collection of primary source materials for scholars and students studying the civil rights movement.

The organization’s records cover a host of topics, including segregation in schools, on buses and in public facilities; discrimination in housing and property ownership; voting rights; police brutality; racial violence; and countless other infringements of civil rights.

Digitization of the collection was done in collaboration with the Legal Defense Fund and was made possible with the generous support of the Ford Foundation, which provided core funding for the establishment of the Library’s “For the People: Fund for Powering Knowledge” designed to connect Americans with important social movements and showcase how they shape the fabric of American life and government.

“The Library of Congress is honored to preserve the documentary legacy of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and its fight for racial justice and equality,” said Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden. “I am grateful to both Sherrilyn Ifill and her successor Janai Nelson as president and director-counsel of the Legal Defense Fund for supporting our organizations’ shared vision of providing greater access to resources documenting the organization’s transformative work and storied history.”

The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., commonly called the Legal Defense Fund, was created by the NAACP in 1939 to administer tax-exempt donations for the legal program. Although the fund has operated as a separate entity since its inception, for many years it shared staff members and a board of directors with the parent organization. The fund severed ties with the NAACP in 1957 but retained its original name.

Highlights of the Legal Defense Fund records include:

  • Files pertaining to the Detroit riot of 1943; 
  • Correspondence pertaining to Josephine Baker’s treatment at the Stork Club in New York City, 1951; 
  • Letters in 1955 between Thurgood Marshall and Simeon Booker, Washington bureau chief for Jet magazine, concerning witnesses for the Emmett Till trial;
  • Correspondence between Thurgood Marshall and his staff concerning a trip to Korea to investigate charges of racism in the U.S. military and the disproportionate number of court martial proceedings brought against Black soldiers, 1951;
  • A letter from Langston Hughes to Henry Lee Moon concerning his poem, “The Ballad of Harry Moore,” January 3, 1952; 
  • Documents about Brown v. Board of Education, 1954, and related cases; and
  • Cases concerning elections and voting rights in the 1940s and 1950s with one Alabama primary election case, Gray v. Main, from 1966.

In conjunction with this digitization project, the Legal Defense Fund Archives counsel has also reviewed the remaining 55 containers of restricted processed records and has cleared about half of the folders for scanning later this year with their online release anticipated in early 2025.

The Library of Congress Manuscript Division houses the most comprehensive civil rights collection in the country. In addition to the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund Records, the division also holds the original records of its parent organization, the NAACP, along with those of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, National Urban League, Leadership Conference on Civil Rights, and Gilbert Jonas Company as well as the personal papers of Edward W. Brooke, Robert L. Carter, Frederick Douglass, James Forman, Patricia Roberts Harris, Thurgood Marshall, A. Philip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, Arthur Spingarn, Moorfield Storey, Rosa Parks, Joseph Rauh, Mary Church Terrell, Booker T. Washington, and Roy Wilkins.

Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Shugerman on the Rise of the Prosecutor Politician

Jed H. Shugerman, Boston University School of Law, has posted The Rise of the Prosecutor Politicians: Race, War, and the Roots of Mass Incarceration:

Earl Warren (LC)
This excerpt is from my book project, "The Rise of the Prosecutor Politicians: Race, War, and the Roots of Mass Incarceration." The book begins with the recent episodes of non- prosecution of police for excessive force and recent fundings on the cause of mass incarceration: the converse phenomenon of increasing rates of prosecuting arrests. We take it as a given today that the office of prosecutor can be a stepping-stone to higher political office, but in fact, it is a relatively recent phenomenon that emerged in the mid-twentieth century.

My historical database on these trends throughout the states from 1880 to 2017 at my post, The Rise of the Prosecutor Politicians”: Database of Prosecutorial Experience for Justices, Circuit Judges, Governors, AGs, and Senators, 1880-2017.  I then offer a draft chapter “The Rise of Prosecutor-Politicians: Earl Warren, the Japanese Internment, and the 1942 Governor’s Race” on my new findings from his overlooked political and campaign papers in the California State Archive in Sacramento. Warren’s political rise reflects broader changes in American society that catapulted him to political power, particularly the increasing focus on organized crime, anti-Communism, racial targeting, and the centralization of law enforcement. Earl Warren was both an effect and a cause of the rise of the prosecutor-politician: an effect of the changes in American life that delivered political opportunities to prosecutors, which Warren took advantage of; and a cause by becoming an example to other ambitious young politicians who watched his rapid ascent from Oakland prosecutor to California attorney general to governor to vice-presidential nominee in 1948.

Historians have interpreted Warren’s role in managing the Japanese internment differently, with varying degrees of blame and excuses. However, this new research shows that Warren campaigned actively in 1942 on the “Japanese problem.” He was one of the most vocal leaders, and not a follower, in whipping up support for aggressive military-based policies against Japanese-Americans, as well as targeting Latinos. This paper presents a new theory for Earl Warren's support for African-American civil rights: while Asians and Latinos were the pariah groups in California, Blacks were a rapidly growing swing voting bloc. Warren's political campaigns drew him to regard Blacks as important political allies. My research uncovers some new sources in those archives, especially the Warren campaign’s 100-page handbook for the 1942 Governor’s race.

--Dan Ernst

Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Swain on Contractual Rectification

Warren Swain, University of Auckland Faculty of Law, has posted Not Worth the Paper it's Written on: Contractual Rectification: An Historical Account, which appeared in the Journal of Equity 17 (2023): 161-180.

Written contracts have been important for millennia. They bring certain evidentiary advantages. Problems may also arise, however, when the written document fails to reflect the intentions of the parties. This is why the equitable doctrine of rectification is so important. In certain limited circumstances, it allows the written words in the contract to be modified. In recent decades, there have been considerable debates about the proper scope of rectification. These questions cannot be understood properly without a proper grasp of the history of the subject. Rectification did not develop in isolation. It was shaped by developments within the law of contract, including the parol evidence rule, the rise in commercial contracting and was impacted by the way that contracts came to rationalised. Set alongside these considerations there is a different tradition of preventing unconscionable behaviour in equity.
--Dan Ernst

Monday, September 23, 2024

CFP: Contours of Legal History in India

[We have the following CFP.  DRE]

The National Law School of India University (NLSIU), Bangalore, and the Max Planck Institute for Legal History and Legal Theory are organising a Legal History Workshop, titled Contours of Legal History In India: Pedagogy and Research, on March 27 and 28, 2025, at the NLSIU campus.

About the Workshop.  Emerging research on legal history in India has emphasized upon the dynamic life of  law, going beyond its doctrinal imperatives, and highlighting histories of petitioners, lawyers, and litigants both in the courtrooms and outside it. Legal historical research includes new archives and methodologies for rethinking the relationship of law with society – that is, between the normative imaginings rooted in the realm of ideas and intellectual legacies and the everyday experiences of law rooted in mundane operations. ‘Contours of Legal History in India: Pedagogy and Research’ is the first workshop co-organized by the Max Planck Institute of Legal History and Legal Theory, Frankfurt (Germany) and National Law School of India University, Bangalore (India) that will bring together researchers, scholars, and students to discuss the new imperatives in the field of legal history in India.

In the recent clamour to “decolonize”, pre-colonial pasts have often been rendered timeless, while the postcolonial moment has been interpreted as a replica of a “monolithic colonial”. How do we analyze the colonial genealogies of law in contemporary India? What about the precolonial iterations of law in the modern? What are the intersections of historical and legal methodologies and sources? What constitutes legal history in India? How does research intervene in, instruct, create pedagogical practices in both law and history?

Call for Papers.  The Contours of Legal History in India workshop invites contributions from PhD students and early career researchers working on the history of law and legal practices in India. We are interested in research that focuses on the social, cultural, economic, political, and the textual world of law across the colonial, postcolonial, and pre-colonial time periods. By keeping the temporal scope of the submissions wide, this workshop also aims to forge a critical dialogue between the fields of modern, pre-modern, and early-modern legal histories. In so doing, we hope to reinvigorate the debates on historical continuities and discontinuities and situate our respective works within this fragmented continuum.

Contours of Legal History in India is a two-day workshop to be held at the National Law School of India University, Bengaluru on 27 & 28 March 2025. PhD students (preferably in their writing stage) and early career researchers affiliated to Indian universities are encouraged to apply. The workshop organisers will provide financial and infrastructural support towards travel and accommodation.

Submission Guidelines.  In keeping with the format of the workshop, selected applicants will be able to discuss their ongoing research, receive inputs from peers and experts, and explore writing strategies and publishing opportunities.

The submissions can focus on the following historical themes:

    Legal Histories, Archives, and Methods
    Imperialism, Nationalism, Sovereignty
    Material and Visual Histories of Law
    Borders, Migrations, and Legal Regimes
    Science in Law
    Hierarchy, Inequality, Legal Identities

Proposal Submission Deadline. 
Those interested should send in a 400 word abstract of their work and a 200 word biography by October 20, 2024 before 11:59 PM IST to clhi@lhlt.mpg.de

Please make sure to attach your abstract and bio as a single PDF document using your full name as the title of the file.

Note: Please mention which theme your work fits into in your abstract. If your research speaks to multiple themes or neither of the above, do mention that too.

Important dates.  Selected applicants will be contacted by December 20, 2024.  Upon selection, workshop participants will have to submit a 4000 word draft developing their proposal and submit by February 15, 2025. Since it is a workshop, participants will be required to read all the papers from their panel.

For any questions or clarifications, write to: Dr. Reeju  Ray (ray@lhlt.mpg.de)

Saturday, September 21, 2024

Weekend Roundup

  • Balkinization is hosting a symposium on "Law and Historical Materialism" by Jeremy Kessler (Columbia Law). Samuel Moyn (Yale Law) kicked things off. Other participants include Yochai Benkler, Corinne Blalock, Matthew Dimick, Paul Gowder, Brian Leiter, Eva Nanopoulos, and Talha Syed.
  • Jonathan Gienapp and Rachel Shelden discuss “early American political culture and political civility in the early American republic” (Ben Franklin’s World podcast).
  • "Supreme Court Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch talked about civility at the Constitutional Convention" at the National Constitution Center (C-SPAN).
  • "For the project 'The Rhine as Legal Entity? Exploring Multilevel Governance and Intercity Relations in the 16th-Century Wine Trades across the Rhine Region' Tilburg University is hiring a postdoctoral researcher with a passion for (legal) historical research." More.
  • The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum and the Poughkeepsie Public Library District present the annual Paul M. Sparrow Lecture, “Foundations of a Movement: Black Americans, Civil Rights, and the Roosevelts,” a conversation with Basil Smikle on Saturday, October 5, 2024 at 4:00 p.m, in the Henry A. Wallace Center It will also be streamed live to the official FDR Presidential Library YouTube and Facebook accounts. Register here
  • The Brennan Center for Justice in partnership with the Organization of American Historians, will host The Fight Against Originalism Continues, a live virtual event on Wednesday, October 2, 1pm ET.  Speakers are Jonathan Gienapp, Gautham Rao, Rachel Shelden, and Thomas Wolf.
  • Just concluded: the 44th Rechtshistorikertag biennial conference of German-speaking legal historians, devoted to “The Language of Sources," at the Goethe University Frankfurt.
  • ICYMI: Some Supreme Court justices left the bench for more interesting work (AP).  The framers of the Constitution didn’t want you to choose the president, says Michael Klarman (Harvard Law Today).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.

Friday, September 20, 2024

An Anthology on International Law and Relations

Word has reached us via H-Law of the publication of Relations internationales et droit(s) : acteurs, institutions et législations comparées (1815-1914) (Pedone, 2024) co-edited by Raphaël Cahen, Sara L. Kimble, Pierre Allorant, Walter Badier and P. Sean Morris. It treats the history of international law and international relations organized thematically with articles in both English and French.  

The history of international law and international relations has undergone a historiographical revival in the last twenty years. In particular, the bicentenary of the Congress of Vienna has enabled us to reconsider the establishment of the European concert, as an international system, in the 19th century. The study of the relationship between international relations and law(s) has given rise to a rich field of research. This book is proof of this. It is structured around three main themes: those involved in international relations and international law (jurists, magistrates, lawyers, activists, publishers); international and comparative law institutions (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, courts, Council of State, universities, academies); and international law experts and expertise. The book brings together more than twenty previously unpublished contributions, in English and French, by authors from several continents. Each contribution explores innovative aspects of the relationship between law(s) and international relations in the 19th century. Either by focusing on one or more institutions, or on a group of actors - legal advisors, lawyers, judges, activists, publicists - or through the biography of a jurist. Several chapters shed light on the birth of the profession of “international jurist”, as well as the link between comparative legislation and international law.
–Dan Ernst.  TOC here.

CFP: Historical Perspectives on Lay Legal Education

[We have the following CFP.  DRE.]

Learning about the law: Historical perspectives on public legal education for laypersons and underprivileged groups.  20-21 May 2025, University of Helsinki

This conference focuses on public legal education in a historical perspective. It aims to discuss the various ways in which legal information has been disseminated to groups of laypersons or underprivileged people in order to enhance their legal literacy. Such groups can include e.g. women and children, workers, people with disabilities, immigrants and refugees.
 
In the wake of industrialisation and the growth of the working class, many countries implemented legislation regarding workers' protection in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This in turn caused the need to educate workers on their rights. The early 20th century also witnessed the growth of women's rights regarding e.g. education, occupation, property and marriage - all of which women needed information on. Throughout history, there have been waves of immigration around the world for various reasons. Those leaving their homes and moving to another country have also needed knowledge on their rights and the laws they need to follow. Moreover, besides underprivileged groups, educating laypersons in general on legal matters has also been part of building liberal, democratic nation states in which citizens are aware of the legal system and know how to navigate it. This kind of public legal education can take various forms. Legal knowledge has been distributed e.g. through handbooks, magazine articles, popular lectures and courses.
 
The conference aims to bring together historical research on the topic from different countries or regions to form a comparative understanding on the reasons for such activities, the forms they take and the consequences these practices had for each group of people and even society as a whole.
 
Papers could discuss e.g.:

  • the motives for distributing legal knowledge to laypersons and underprivileged groups
  • the different actors involved (providers and recipients of public legal education)
  • whether the activities are initiated from within the specific group or from the outside
  • what kind of legal information was seen as relevant for each group
  • the role of professional lawyers in these activities
  • the role of various interest groups in promoting these activities (associations, political parties etc.)
  • the role of the state in these activities
  • the different media used to disseminate legal education (courses, lectures, handbooks, magazines, radio and tv programmes etc.)
  • the role of publishers or media outlets
  • public legal education as part of developing a civil society
  • how has the increasing legal awareness impacted each group
  • the topic from a broader comparative perspective
  • a longue durée view on the phenomenon

Keynote presentations will be given by: Dr. Kate Bradley (University of Kent); Dr. Elsa Trolle Önnerfors (Lund University); and Prof. Felice Batlan (Chicago-Kent College of Law, Illinois Institute of Technology).
 
Deadline for paper proposals with abstracts (max. 400 words) and a short description of the presenter is 30 November 2024.  For further information, as well as sending paper proposals, please contact Marianne Vasara-Aaltonen (marianne.vasara-aaltonen@helsinki.fi), University Lecturer in Legal History at the University of Helsinki.