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Showing posts sorted by date for query Ablavsky. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Monday, April 21, 2025

Ablavsky & Berger on Birthright Citizenship -- "Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof: The Indian Law Context"

Gregory Ablavsky (Stanford Law) and Bethany Berger (University of Iowa College of Law) have posted "Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof: The Indian Law Context" - a timely intervention in the debate over birthright citizenship. The article will appear in the online companion to the New York University Law Review. Here's the abstract:

Section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”  Much of the debate over the meaning of this provision in the nineteenth century, especially what it meant to be “subject to the jurisdiction” of the United States, concerned the distinctive status of Native peoples—who were largely not birthright citizens even though born within the borders of United States. 

It is unsurprising, then, that the Trump Administration and others have seized on these precedents in their attempt to unsettle black-letter law on birthright citizenship.  But their arguments that this history demonstrates that jurisdiction meant something other than its ordinary meaning at the time—roughly, the power to make, decide, and enforce law—are anachronistic and wrong. They ignore the history of federal Indian law.

For most of the first century of the United States, the unique status of Native nations as quasi-foreign entities was understood to place these nations’ internal affairs beyond Congress’s legislative jurisdiction. By the 1860s, this understanding endured within federal law, but it confronted increasingly vocal challenges. The arguments over the Fourteenth Amendment, then, recapitulated this near century of debate over Native status. In crafting the citizenship clause, members of Congress largely agreed that jurisdiction meant the power to impose laws; where they heatedly disagreed was whether Native nations were, in fact, subject to that authority. Most concluded they were not, and in 1884, in Elk v. Wilkins, the Supreme Court affirmed the conclusion that Native nations’ quasi-foreign status excluded tribal citizens from birthright citizenship. 

But the “anomalous” and “peculiar” status of Native nations, in the words of the nineteenth-century Supreme Court, means that the law governing tribal citizens cannot and should not be analogized to the position of other communities—or at least any communities who lack a quasi-foreign sovereignty and territory outside most federal and state law but within the borders of the United States. Indeed, the Court in Wong Kim Ark expressly rejected the attempt to invoke Elk v. Wilkins to deny birthright citizenship to a Chinese man born in the U.S. to non-citizen parents, ruling that the decision “concerned only members of the Indian tribes within the United States.” The analogy has no more validity today than it did then, and the current Court should continue to reject it.

Read on here, at SSRN.

-- Karen Tani

Monday, November 11, 2024

Penn Symposium on History in Constitutional Interpretation

[We have the following announcement of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review’s symposium for Volume 173 The Uses (and Misuses) of History in Constitutional Interpretation. It will be held in-person and online on Friday, November 22, and Saturday, November 23.]

The Roberts Court has embarked on a constitutional revolution in many different areas of law, including reproductive rights, the Second Amendment, and the Religion Clauses. The Court’s conservative supermajority has repeatedly turned to history to justify and legitimate its decisions. Originalism is an important part of the Court’s language. It has recently adopted a new model of “text, history, and tradition” in important cases like Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v. Bruen, and Kennedy v. Bremerton School District.

Because history is a central source of justification for the Roberts Court’s revolution, it is crucial to understand how history is being used—and sometimes misused and even manipulated—in its decisions.

Debates about the relevance of history to constitutional interpretation occurred in the 1980s and 1990s as the conservative legal movement was gaining prominence. Thirty years later, that movement is ascendant and controls the U.S. Supreme Court. Yet at this very moment of success, the Court’s conservative majority is not consistent in how it uses history. It alternates between many different forms of originalism, including its new emphasis on traditionalism. And sometimes—as in cases like Citizens United v. FEC, Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle School Dist. No. 1, or Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees—it dispenses with originalism altogether.

The affirmative action case from last year’s Term, Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, presents an especially interesting example of how the majority, concurrences, and dissents relied on history from differing ideological perspectives. Reconstruction history does not support a colorblindness rule, and the different opinions offer a window into the uses and misuses of historical memory. In fact, the Congress that drafted the Fourteenth Amendment engaged in race-conscious remedies to address discrimination. Moreover, in the Court’s previous affirmative action decisions, even Justices who adhered to originalism repeatedly refused to discuss the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. With the decision in favor of SFFA, the Court further embedded a malleable doctrine of text, history, and tradition into its jurisprudence.

This symposium seeks to bring together diverse scholars to publish leading scholarship addressing the many open questions about the role of history in constitutional interpretation, organized around Yale Law Professor Jack Balkin’s forthcoming book, Memory and Authority: The Uses of History in Constitutional Interpretation (Yale University Press 2024).

[Register hereSchedule and CLE credit information after the jump.

Saturday, November 2, 2024

Weekend Roundup

  • David S. Tanenhaus (UNLV)
    Heartfelt congratulations to David S. Tanenhaus on his receipt of the American Society for Legal History's Craig Joyce Medal, awarded to recognized extraordinary and sustained service to ASLH (UNLV Boyd School of Law).
  • Garrett Epps reviews Stuart Banner's The Most Powerful Court in the World, "a fresh and readable one-volume history of the Court [that] explains how we got from Marbury to Dobbs" (Washington Monthly).
  • On Saturday, November 9, from 12:30pm to 1:30pm, Alison L. LaCroix will discuss The Interbellum Constitution as part of the Chicago Humanities Festival, at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts, 915 E 60th St, Chicago, IL 60637.  The event is open to the public.
  • The Smithsonian American Women’s History Museum has launched We Do Declare: Women’s Voices on Independence, a "multi-year oral history and education project" commencing with the fiftieth anniversary of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act.

  • On Monday, November 4, at Noon ET at the National Constitution Center, Keith Richotte, Jr., and Matthew L.M. Fletcher (University of Michigan) will discuss "Native American history and law through the stories of landmark Supreme Court cases."
  • Christine Kexel Chabot, Marquette University Law School, is again making available the syllabus for her course Litigating the Lessons of History, in response to the revived debate making legal history part of the law-school curriculum.
  • A notice of Molly Brady's  Brandeis Chair lecture at HLS, much of which she devoted to the legal history of single-family dwellings in the United States (Harvard Law Today).
  • The University of Helsinki Faculty of Law "invites applications for a fixed term employment as a doctoral researcher or a postdoctoral researcher" with the project Comparing Early Modern Colonial Laws, led by Academy Professor Heikki Pihlajamäki.   More.
  • The Stanford Law School has announced its latest round of Sallyanne Payton Fellows.  I mentioned this here not simply because two legal historians, Greg Ablavsky and Bernadette Meyler, are their mentors, but because I gained lasting insights into the mindset of the first, postwar generation of Washington lawyers when then-Professor Payton shared her recollections of Charles Horsky when I presented at Michigan Law, some years ago.  DRE
  • ICYMI:  Kristina M. Lee, University of South Dakota, on "What the history of blasphemy laws in the US and the fight for religious freedom can teach us today" (Akron Legal News).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.

Saturday, August 3, 2024

Weekend Roundup

  • Noah Rosenblum, NYU Law, discusses Securities and Exchange Commission v. Jarkesy in WilmerHale's podcast series. "Leveraging his background as a legal historian, Rosenblum provides historical context and explains how applying a traditional Constitutional interpretation to the case increases its complexity."
  • The Securities and Exchange Commission held a 90th Anniversary Celebration, including remarks by Michael Beschloss and Joel Seligman.  The recording is here.
  • George Garnett asks why constitutional history is coming back in fashion in university history departments in Britain (History Today).
  • Learning to teach Milliken v. Bradley at “a two-week institute, 'Democracy in Education: A View from Detroit,' at the Walter P. Reuther Library” at Wayne State University (Chalkbeat).
  • The Comfort Fund of the University of Sydney’s law school, founded in July 1940 “to keep legal men and students in the Services in touch with the school and the legal professions, but the main object of the fund was to provide reading matter to those whose name was on the roll.”
  • George Yin, UVA Law, on what Stanley Surrey would have made of the New Textualism (UVA Law).
  • ICYMI: “Explore the history of politics and the Constitution in ‘A More or Less Perfect Union’” with Judge Douglas H. Ginsburg (NBC Montana).

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

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Cromwell Foundation Legal History Article of the Year Prize to Ablavsky

[We have the following announcement.  DRE.]

November 13, 2023
New York, New York

The William Nelson Cromwell Foundation announced today that its inaugural Legal History Article of the Year Prize was awarded to Gregory Ablavsky of Stanford Law School for his article, “Getting Public Rights Wrong: The Lost History of the Private Land Claims,” 74 Stan. L. Rev. 277 (2022).  

In “Getting Public Rights Wrong,” Ablavksy takes up the subject of “public rights,” a category the U.S. Supreme Court has used since 1856 to designate those rights susceptible to federal administrative adjudication rather than adjudication in the Article III courts.  Ablavsky’s article recovers a “sprawling jurisprudence” from the nineteenth century involving private land claims by the inhabitants of territories ceded to the United States by foreign sovereigns.  As Ablavsky ably shows, nineteenth-century courts treated the resolution of such private land claims as “the paradigmatic example of public rights that could be resolved by administrative adjudication.”  “Getting Public Rights Wrong” establishes a fundamental point that has heretofore gone misunderstood in the historical literature, with serious consequences in the jurisprudence of the twenty-first-century administrative state.  “Throughout the nineteenth century,” Ablavsky writes, “the administrative adjudication of at least one form of vested rights to private property was constitutionally permissible.”

The William Nelson Cromwell Foundation, established by William Nelson Cromwell in 1930, supports work in American legal history.  The Foundation has long awarded Early Scholar prizes and fellowships to early career scholars in the field of American legal history. The Foundation’s new prize for the legal history article of the year, which includes a $10,000 award, is intended to recognize the growing role of legal history and teaching and research in law schools. The new annual prize is awarded for the best article in the field of legal history, written by a legal scholar, or published in a journal of legal scholarship. This is the first prize the Foundation has offered which is open to scholars of any level of seniority. The prize committee, chaired by Foundation trustee John Fabian Witt (Yale Law School), consisted of Foundation trustees Sarah Barringer Gordon (Penn Carey Law) and John Langbein (Yale Law School), along with Dan Ernst (Georgetown Law), Amalia Kessler (Stanford Law School), Alison LaCroix (University of Chicago Law School), and Dean Troy McKenzie (NYU School of Law).  

The Foundation makes grants to support important work in all facets of American legal history including archival preservation, scholarly study of original documents, original research in all areas of the law, and research and writing of biographies of major legal figures. Information on how to apply for a prize, fellowship or grant may be found on the Foundation’s website.

Saturday, July 15, 2023

Weekend Roundup

  • Congratulations to Norma Dawson, CBE and professor of law emerita at Queens University Belfast, for the conferral upon her of an honorary doctorate by the University of Edinburgh.  Professor Dawson is a past president of the Irish Legal History Society and the author of A Modern Legal History of Treasure (Palgrave Macmillan, 2023), which “examines treasure law and practice from the rise of the new science of archaeology in the early Victorian period to the present day.”
  • Over at Rechtsgeschiedenis Blog,Otto Vervaart has put up a very useful post on digitized archival collections on JSTOR of interest to legal historians, starting with the holdings of the Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York.
  • Congratulations to Nina Farnia, Albany Law School, corecipient (with Sabarish Suresh, National University of Singapore) of the Julien Mezey Dissertation Prize of the Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and the Humanities for her dissertation, “Imperialism in the Making of U.S. Law,” which Professor Farnia completed in the history department at UC Davis! 
  • Kenneth W. Mack, Harvard Law, reviews Jonathan Eig’s new biography of Martin Luther King (Guardian).
  • "The Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum and the Mid-Hudson Antislavery History Project will present a conversation and book signing with Albert M. Rosenblatt, author of The Eight: The Lemmon Slave Case and the Fight for Freedom, at 6:00 p.m. on Wednesday, July 26, 2023. The event will be held in the Henry A. Wallace Center at the FDR Presidential Library and Home and streamed live to the official FDR Library YouTube and Facebook accounts."  More.
  • "A museum that tells the history of the Clotilda — the last ship known to transport Africans to the American South for enslavement — opened [recently], exactly 163 years after the vessel arrived in Alabama’s Mobile Bay" (AP).
  • The articles from that symposium on the history of the Administrative Procedure Act are now out in the Notre Dame Law Review, as we learned from Emily Bremer here.
  • Lawbook Exchange has released its July 2023 catalogue, which includes a first American edition of Isaac Espinasse's Reports of Cases Argued and Ruled at Nisi Prius (1795).

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

Saturday, July 8, 2023

Weekend Roundup

  • Over at Balkinization, the symposium on Christian Fritz's Monitoring American Federalism has concluded. A round-up of all the posts is available here
  • There a new National Constitution Center podcast: “In a special Independence Day episode, scholars Akhil Amar of Yale Law School and Peter Onuf of the University of Virginia join host Jeffrey Rosen for a discussion on the historical legacy of founding father Thomas Jefferson.”
  • The Lillian Goldman Law Library at the Yale Law School has announced the "Drew Days III Archive in collaboration with LLMC Digital. This resource contains speeches, remarks, and interviews by Days."
  • The July 2023 issue of the Newsletter of the Historical Society of the DC Circuit is available here
  • Congratulations to Naomi Jewel Mezey, Georgetown Law, upon her receipt of 2023 James Boyd White Award from the Association for the Study of Law, Culture, and Humanities at the annual conference in Toronto, Canada on June 22.  The award recognizes "scholarly originality and excellence and commitment to the field of law, culture, and the humanities.”
  • ICYMI:  Penn Carey Law announces the start of Sophia Z. Lee's deanship.  Martha S. Jones on “Why Republicans Keep Calling for the End of Birthright Citizenship” (The Atlantic).  Gregory Ablavsky on the Brackeen Indian Child Welfare Act Decision (SLS Blog).
  • Was nun, constitutional historian?  A widely read thread by Rachel Sheldon, Penn State, prompted by the use of history in recent Supreme Court decisions.

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

Saturday, June 24, 2023

Weekend Roundup

  • Word from George Burton Adams, via Samuel Bray, Notre Dame Law (Volokh Conspiracy). 
  • Legal historians continue to garner teaching awards! Congratulations to Greg Ablavsky (Stanford Law School) on being selected by the SLS graduating class for the John Bingham Hurlbut Award for Excellence in Teaching.
  •  The recording of the Supreme Court Historical Society’s commemoration of Juneteenth, a “conversation on the lynching of Ed Johnson in 1906 and United States v. Shipp with Judge Curtis Collier and the Society’s Executive Director, Jim Duff,” is now on YouTube.
  • The historians and law professors amicus curiae brief in  CFPB v. Cmty. Fin. Servs. Ass’n Am., Ltd., No. 22-448 (U.S. May 15, 2023) is here.  Its authors are Kevin Arlyck, Georgetown University Law Center; Brian Balogh, University of Virginia; Aziz Z. Huq, University of Chicago Law School; Richard R. John, Columbia University; Gautham Rao, American University; and Noah A. Rosenblum, New York University School of Law.  Check back on LHB for links to two articles relating to this case on Monday.
 Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.

Friday, May 19, 2023

On American Legal Topography: Argueta Funes on "Outside In: The Oral History of Guido Calabresi"

This post, by José Argueta Funes is the sixth in a series of posts in which legal historians reflect on Outside In: The Oral History of Guido Calabresi (Oxford University Press), by Norman I. Silber. Argueta Funes is currently an Academic Fellow at Columbia Law School; as of July 1, he will be an Assistant Professor of Law at Berkeley Law.

The first volume of Outside In (OI) closes with a wonderful reflection on Guido’s third major book, A Common Law for the Age of Statutes (ACLAS). Published in 1982, A Common Law grew out of Guido’s 1977 Holmes Lectures at Harvard Law School. Over the course of the twentieth century, Guido argued, statutes had become the primary source of law in America, displacing the common law. This shift raised a problem of legal change. Statutes were much harder to alter once enacted, and therefore Americans could go on living under laws which would not survive the legislative process if put up to a vote once again. And some of these laws, even if reenacted, would still “not fit . . . our whole legal landscape” (ACLAS, 2). The law and the people would be out of sync. A Common Law set out a radical solution for this problem: allow judges to update statutes. It then endeavored to show that this solution was not radical at all, but rather built upon “antecedents in which a common law court can take comfort” (OI, 391).

A Common Law is usually considered as Guido’s entry in long-running debates about the relationship between common law and legislation and about the nature of legal change. But while reading Outside In, my mind went to a different historical problem: American empire. And I got there by way of Guido’s repeated invocation of a curious phrase: “legal topography.” Guido was not thinking about America’s encroachment on other sovereigns when he used this phrase, which is simply shorthand to describe the work of common-law judges and lawyers. And this shorthand is deeply informed by nineteenth-century ideas about the common law. So, I started to wonder if we might use the idea of a “legal topography” to think about nineteenth-century lawyers engaging with the various kinds of law that existed across the continent and the articulation of empire.

Let me first sketch out what I think Guido means. In A Common Law, Guido uses the phrase “legal topography” (ACLAS, 98) alongside the phrases “legal fabric” (ACLAS, 96) and “legal landscape” (ACLAS, 98). The three phrases seem to refer to legal principles underlying American society (ACLAS 96-97) and to the diverse sources of law and legal interpretation one can find across the land (ACLAS, 98-99). Lawyers and judges weave the fabric or map the landscape—meaning, they articulate the underlying principles and figure out how different pieces or sources of law fit with each other.

This mapping is complicated, for at least two reasons. First, law has its own internal logic that requires some sort of training. Second—and more to the core of A Common Law—these legal cartographers must also keep track of changes in society and figure out how the principles and pieces of law relate to each other in time. All of this is deeply evocative of how nineteenth-century common lawyers described their work. As Kunal Parker has argued, common law judges claimed to “‘read’ the community as it presented itself” in the courtroom to articulate legal change while preserving social identity over time (Parker, 16).

But what if we reorient “legal topography” away from its temporal dimensions and take a more literal, spatial approach? There were many sources and kinds of law in nineteenth-century America. We are used to thinking about state and federal sovereigns and their law, and this problem was central for many nineteenth-century jurists, like Joseph Story. But Story understood that the complexities of this topography extended beyond federalism, hence his knowledge, as Kent Newmyer noted, of merchant customs (Newmyer, 121-22). Recently, Kellen Funk has shown that religious doctrine, too, could supply legal rules to apply in the distribution of church assets. And Greg Ablavsky has recently emphasized that American lawyers could not afford to ignore Spanish, French, or Mexican property law. These sources were out there as part of the topography for lawyers to incorporate them into legal argument. They might do this, too, with the laws of Indian tribes, even as the United States pursued efforts to attack and eliminate them.

Consider an example from Oregon, detailed by Peggy Pascoe in What Comes Naturally. In 1921 the Oregon Supreme Court held that an Indian woman named Ophelia Paquet (Tillamook) could not claim the estate of her deceased white husband, Fred Paquet, because Oregon’s anti-miscegenation statute forbade marriages between white men and Indian women. This was something of a surprise, because that court had previously recognized marriages between Indian women and white men as the source for husbands’ land claims under the Oregon Donation Act (Pascoe, 97). Pascoe astutely reconstructed this case as an example of a white supremacist retrenchment in the American West. But there are also hints behind the case of an underexplored legal topography.

We can glean some outcroppings in the story of how Fred and Ophelia came to be husband and wife. As Pascoe explained, their relationship began sometime in the 1880s, and they soon became the target of a local jury intent on punishing non-marital sexual relations. Fred “consulted a lawyer” who advised him to “hold a ceremony that would meet the legal requirements of an Indian custom marriage” (Pascoe, 104). Fred and Ophelia got married after Fred consulted Ophelia’s relatives and the Tillamook Chief Betsy Fuller. The jury’s harassment apparently stopped thereafter, and Pascoe’s narrative then goes to the end of the story, where shifting attitudes about race would invalidate the marriage and defeat Ophelia’s property claim.

But I would like to pause on the bit of legal advice that Fred received. The lawyer he consulted expected the jury to recognize such a marriage as a legitimate relationship. Put differently, this lawyer is telling us that Indigenous legalities were a feature of Oregon’s late-nineteenth-century legal topography. How extensive this phenomenon was is not clear, but some preliminary archival research suggests he was not alone. Thus, in 1900, a different lawyer could write a brief to the Oregon Supreme Court and claim that because Indians had “resided in the state of Oregon . . . [f]rom time immemorial,” their “customs, when not in conflict with positive law and reasonable in themselves, . . . must be considered as a part of the law of Oregon” (Appellant’s Brief, at 12, Non-she-po v. Wa-win-ta, 62 Pac. 15 (June 22, 1900) (Case No. 3805, Oregon State Archives)). But by 1921, Oregon’s Supreme Court was ready to erase tribal law from the legal topography.

I am likely far from the legal topography that Guido understood himself to be engaging with when he wrote A Common Law. But it is a credit to his understanding of the practices and ideologies surrounding the common law that we might get from him a useful heuristic to understand that work of lawyers in the nineteenth century, and, through them, a window into American empire. The accidents of a legal topography might usefully signal collisions among multiple legal orders, between state legal institutions and popular legalities, between power and law. If we broaden our sense of the sources of law and historicize the legal topography, we might ask, as Guido did, “[w]hat kind of confused landscape, what kind of ragged map, have we got” (ACLAS, 99)?

-- José Argueta Funes

Monday, May 15, 2023

Ablavsky, "Too Much History: Castro Huerta and the Problem of Change in Indian Law"

Gregory Ablavsky (Stanford Law School) has posted "Too Much History: Castro Huerta and the Problem of Change in Indian Law," Supreme Court Review (2022). The abstract:

The Supreme Court’s decision last Term in Castro-Huerta v. Oklahoma dramatically rewrote the rules of criminal jurisdiction in federal Indian law. For the first time since 1882, the Court judicially expanded the scope of state criminal jurisdiction in Indian country, finding that states hold jurisdiction over Indian-on-non-Indian crime concurrently with the federal government. In reaching this conclusion, the Court exemplified the subjectivism that scholars have criticized in the Court’s Indian law jurisprudence for decades. The opinion distinguished or cast aside at least six prior decisions where the Court had seemingly reached the opposite conclusion, as well as concluding that the Court had already substantially limited the Court’s foundational holding in Worcester v. Georgia (1833) that Indian country ordinarily lies outside state authority.

Building on these earlier critiques, this Article uses Castro-Huerta to examine a less explored flaw in the Court’s Indian law rulings—what I call the problem of “too much history.” In Indian law, judges and litigants must make sense of over two centuries of jurisdictional debates, recorded largely not in statutes or constitutional provisions but in dozens of shifting Supreme Court decisions. The key question in Castro-Huerta, and the core of the dispute between majority and dissent, was change--how the law on state jurisdiction in Indian country had shifted over time. But the sheer mass of history makes it hard for the Justices to identify legitimate legal change in Indian law.

This conundrum leads to two broad types of judicial use of history in Indian law. “Good” history decisions, epitomized by this Term’s decision in Ysleta del Sur Pueblo v. Texas, employ specific context to examine narrowly defined legal questions. By contrast, “bad” history opinions, exemplified by Castro-Huerta, turn to the past as an independent source of law, ask broad, unanswerable questions of it, and provide no clear way to assess the inevitable heap of conflicting evidence.

Having laid out this challenge, the Article reexamines the question of the specific historical change at the core at Castro-Huerta. Rather than the majority’s narrative of abandonment and the dissent’s narrative of continuity, I think a more accurate account of what the Court has done with respect to state jurisdiction in Indian country is translation—trying to make sense of older legal principles within a new jurisprudential frame. But this approach makes the Court’s decisions in this area especially prone to misreading and selective citation, as Castro-Huerta underscored. 

Read on here.

-- Karen Tani

Saturday, April 22, 2023

Weekend Roundup

  • My Georgetown Law colleagues Brad Snyder and David Vladeck have filed a FOIA suit against the National Archives over access to the FBI’s records on Angelo Herndon (Atlanta Journal-Constitution).  DRE
  • Gregory Ablavsky and Tanner Allread discuss their recent article "We the (Native) People? How Indigenous Peoples Debated the U.S. Constitution," on SLS Blog.
  • We're ready with some primo material for exam-grading-season procrastination: Hearst Metrotone Newsreels, from 1929 through 1967.  Hugh Johnson denouncing the San Francisco General Strike of 1934!  H/t: DW/JHS.
  • Manisha Sinha, the James L. and Shirley A. Draper Chair in American History at the University of Connecticut, delivered "The Abolitionist Roots of the Reconstruction Constitution," as the biannual Ubbelohde Lecture at Case Western Reserve University last Thursday (The Daily).
  • "Radcliffe Fellow Omer Aziz, a lawyer and the former foreign policy adviser to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, discussed fascism in America at a Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies presentation Wednesday” (Harvard Crimson).
  • The revelations concerning Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas have generated interest in the resignation of Abe Fortas from the Court in 1969.  John P. MacKenzie, The Supreme Court justice who resigned in disgrace over his finances, in WaPo.  Business Insider India quotes Laura Kalman's Abe Fortas: A Biography.
  • ICYMI: Cay Risen on the fuzzy border between journalism and history (AHA Perspectives on History).  The legal history of national security charges, from espionage to sedition to whistleblowers (GBH).
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.

Saturday, March 11, 2023

Weekend Roundup

  • Earlier this week, the White House announced appointments to Permanent Committee for the Oliver Wendell Holmes Devise.  The Committee is composed of the Librarian of Congress and four additional members appointed by the President.  The new appointees are Risa Lauren Goluboff, Martha S. Jones, and Trevor Morrison.  UVA's notice on Dean Goluboff's appointment is here; NYU's on Dean Emeritus Morrison's is here.  
  • On March 23, Kevin Butterfield, director of the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress, will discuss his book, The Making of Tocqueville’s America: Law and Association the Early United States, in support of the ongoing exhibit at the Library of Congress, Join In: Voluntary Associations in America.
  • Nicole Carlson Maffei has posted Lucile Lomen (1920-1996), an essay on the first woman to serve as a clerk to a justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, on the Supreme Court Historical Society website.
  • “An archive belonging to attorney Linda Coffee, who filed the initial lawsuit in Rowe v. Wade, will go up for auction" (Dallas Morning News).
  • "Stanford University Historian Gregory Ablavsky will lecture on 'The Past, Present, and Future of Native Sovereignty in Federal Law' at 5 p.m. March 15 Shideler Hall room 152," University of Miami (Ohio).

  • Queen Mary, University of London, announces its new LLM in Common Law Theory and Practice. “Unique in the landscape of legal postgraduate education, this programme combines theoretical and applied study of the common law. Whether you are you are unfamiliar with the common law or have studied in a common law jurisdiction and wish to deepen your knowledge, this programme offers a contextual and critical insight into the common law and its workings.” 
  • ICYMI: From the Poor Laws to the Social Security Act (History Channel). A library exhibit on the buildings that housed the University of Arkansas School for Law.  A notice of Norman Silber’s oral history of Judge Guido Calabresi. (Law.com).  Diane Minear, an attorney in the Spencer Fane Overland Park, Kansas, on Myra Bradwell.
  • Updates: A notice of  Laura M. Weinrib’s lecture,“Money, Politics, and the Constitution in the ‘Golden Age’ of Capitalism,” at an event honoring her 2021 appointment as the Fred N. Fishman Professor of Constitutional Law at the Harvard Law School (Harvard Crimson).  Also, we noted with interest that the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation supported this digitization project (NYT).

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

Wednesday, February 15, 2023

Ablavsky and Allread on Indigenous Peoples' Debates over the US Constitution

Gregory Ablavsky, Stanford Law School, and W. Tanner Allread, Stanford University, have posted We the (Native) People?: How Indigenous Peoples Debated the U.S. Constitution, which is forthcoming in the Columbia Law Review:

The Constitution was written in the name of the “People of the United States.” And yet, many of the nation’s actual people were excluded from the document’s drafting and ratification based on race, gender, and class. But these groups were far from silent. A more inclusive constitutional history might capture marginalized communities’ roles as actors, not just subjects, in constitutional debates.

This Article uses the tools of legal and Native history to examine how one such group, Indigenous peoples, argued about and with the U.S. Constitution. It analogizes Native engagement to some of the foundational frames of the “Founding” to underscore its significance for current constitutional discourse. Like their Anglo-American neighbors, Native peoples, too, had a prerevolutionary constitutional order—what we here dub the “diplomatic constitution”—that experienced a crisis during and after the Revolution. After the Constitution’s drafting, Native peoples engaged in their own version of the ratification debates. And then, in the early republic, Native peoples both invoked and critiqued the document as they faced Removal.

This Article’s most important contribution is proof of concept, illustrating what a more inclusive constitutional history might look like. Still, some of the payoffs are doctrinal: broadening the “public” in original public meaning, for instance. But the more significant stakes are theoretical. As this Article contends, by recognizing Indigenous law and constitutional interpretations as part of “our law”—in other words, the pre- and post-constitutional legal heritage of the United States—Native peoples can claim their role as co-creators of constitutional law.
--Dan Ernst

Monday, November 21, 2022

Cromwell Foundation Book Prize to Ablavsky

Every year, at the annual meeting of the American Society for Legal History, the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation announces a series of prizes awarded on the recommendation of subcommittees of the ASLH’s Advisory Committee on the Cromwell Prizes.  At the Chicago meeting earlier this month, John D. Gordan III, who chairs the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation and the ASLH’s Advisory Committee on the Cromwell Prize, announced this year's winners. Today we will recap those announcements, starting with the Cromwell Foundation Book Prize, "awarded annually to the best book in the field of American legal history by an early career scholar."

This year's winner is Gregory Ablavsky (Stanford Law School), for Federal Ground: Governing Property and Violence in the First U.S. Territories (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021). Here is the citation: 

Federal Ground, an analysis of early territorial governance, is beautifully written, deeply researched, innovative, and sophisticated. Mining a wide variety of legal and governmental sources, Ablavsky makes original arguments of consequence to several fields in addition to legal history, including Native American history, settler colonialism, and early American state-building. What appears at first to be a narrative of a failed state turns, unexpectedly, into a curious story of limited state “success,” illuminating how the federal state earned legitimacy and practical power in the only regions where it was in charge. Ablavsky shows how both the Natives and white settlers/speculators used or lobbied inchoate federal institutions – at first, just a handful of officers and their ad hoc commissions – to shape the legal landscape in ways that furthered their interests and visions of the Ohio and Mississippi Valleys. These contestants constructed the state by demanding that it arbitrate disputes – and then taking its money. Ablavsky uses contests over property and federal responses to violence as his chief examples, pulling from diverse and scattered records to weave a complex yet coherent story of competing claims and their often-contingent resolution. He traces federal officials’ encounters with Indigenous law and with Native understandings of consent, efforts to monopolize the legitimate use of violence, and deployment of federal funds with nuance and sensitivity to his sources’ limitations even as he wrings insights from what must have been an unwieldy archive. In Ablavsky’s telling, the federal government emerged not because of an effective or even coherent federal plan of pacification, land-granting, or settlement, but literally from the ground up. His is a knotty tale of furious claims-making in which there are few heroes and that perhaps only in retrospect takes on the majesty of the tragic. The story is complicated and sometimes counterintuitive, yet told crisply and with wit and insight. Ablavsky unearths and interprets sources with the creativity and mastery of a much more senior scholar. Federal Ground is ambitious and illuminating, without overestimating historians’ ability to reconstruct a contested and thorny past. For years to come, this should be the authoritative history for understanding the earliest phase of American territorial, and thus imperial, history.

Congratulations to Professor Ablavsky! And thank you to the members of the book prize subcommittee, chaired by Serena Mayeri.

-- Karen Tani

Tuesday, November 8, 2022

Ablavsky, "Further Thoughts on the Constitutional History of Federal Power Over Indian Affairs"

This post provides an update to an entry in our October 15, 2022, Weekend Roundup, where we noted the following:

It is rare for a seven-year-old law review article to prompt much debate, but with the Indian Child Welfare Act before the Supreme Court this term (in Brackeen v. Haaland), Greg Ablavsky's "Beyond the Indian Commerce Clause" (published in the Yale Law Journal in 2015) is newly relevant. In a recently posted SSRN piece (also available on the Stanford Law School website), Ablavsky details how and why his article came to be "cite-checked" by another scholar earlier this year and what the stakes are of getting this history right. 

Ablavsky (Stanford Law School) has now posted "Further Thoughts on the Constitutional History of Federal Power Over Indian Affairs." The abstract:

This short piece builds on my earlier response to Robert Natelson's purported "cite check" of my 2015 Yale Law Journal article by addressing some of the arguments in his new Federalist Society Review article. It argues 1) that Natelson misinterprets Federalist 42, 2) that colonial-era regulations of Indian trade support a quite broad scope for the law merchant, and 3) that Natelson mischaracterized my methodology while making some odd methodological choices of his own.

It also briefly offers some new evidence on the historical scope of federal authority in Indian affairs that further supports an interpretation of the meaning of "commerce with the Indian tribes" that encompasses intercourse. 

An abbreviated response is available here, at the FedSoc blog.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments in the Brackeen v. Haaland case on November 9.

-- Karen Tani

Saturday, October 15, 2022

Weekend Roundup

  • It is rare for a seven-year-old law review article to prompt much debate, but with the Indian Child Welfare Act before the Supreme Court this term (in Brackeen v. Haaland), Greg Ablavsky's "Beyond the Indian Commerce Clause" (published in the Yale Law Journal in 2015) is newly relevant. In a recently posted SSRN piece (also available on the Stanford Law School website), Ablavsky details how and why his article came to be "cite-checked" by another scholar earlier this year and what the stakes are of getting this history right. 
  •  ICYMI: Eight Landmark Supreme Court Cases That Were Overturned (History Channel).  Enslaved family history records brought to public light by Mississippi project (Clarion, MS, Ledger).
  • Update: The big reveal on Chaucer and Chaumpaigne’s case (NYT).  Molly Brady on evidence of state constitutional conventions (SLog).

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

Monday, July 25, 2022

Ablavsky Wins LSA's Hurst Prize

Congratulations to Gregory Ablavsky, Stanford Law School, for winning the J. Willard Hurst Book Prize of the Law and Society Association “for this year’s best sociolegal history book. Ablavsky’s book, Federal Ground: Governing Property and Violence in the First U.S. Territories (Oxford University Press, 2021), explains the growth of federal authority in the first two U.S. federal territories—the Northwest and Southwest. While the Washington administration, Congress, federal officials, land office administrators and other federal bureaucrats sought to assert their vision of federal power over the West, the land they sought to govern and transform was far from empty. His book addresses the underlying questions of what federal power is and who its architects are. The book further identifies how the federal government can be studied—not as a monolith, but as the outcome of many different struggles playing out at grass-roots levels.”

We hear that Nada Moumtaz, University of Toronto, received Honorable Mention for God’s Property: Islam, Charity, and the Modern State (University of California Press, 2021).

--Dan Ernst

Saturday, July 9, 2022

Weekend Roundup

  • Harvard University continues to make great hires in legal history. Earlier this year, we noted Myisha Eatmon's move. This week, we learned that Erika Lee and George Aumoithe will also join the faculty this year.
  • Kate Masur on Until Justice Be Done on the Abraham Lincoln Book Shop’s YouTube channel.
  • Leslie Jean Reagan on life before Roe vs. Wade (LX News).  Here’s the Joint OAH-AHA Statement on Dobbs. And here's the recording of that OAH webinar on the decision.
  • The latest newsletter of the Historical Society of the DC Circuit is available.
  • ICYMI: You know things are grim when the latest historian's op-ed on the Supreme Court is on the rise of Napoleon (Christine Adams, in WaPo). Also, Hayden Thorne, a PhD Candidate in History at the Victoria University of Wellington, weighs in.  And Bruce W. Dearstyne on the 1922 report by the American Bar Association’s Committee on American Citizenship (HNN). Standing Bear’s pipe tomahawk has been repatriated (Harvard Crimson)
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Legal History in Michigan's Book Review Issue

Several contributions to this year's book review issue of the Michigan Law Review might interest legal historians. Jessica A. Shoemaker reviews Gregory Ablavsky’s Federal Ground: Governing Property and Violence in the First U.S. Territories in The Truth about Property. Jeena Shah reviews Scott L. Cummings’s An Equal Place: Lawyers in the Struggle for Los Angeles, in Community Lawyering in Resistance to Neoliberalism. The issue has a symposium on Sara Mayeux’s Free Justice: A History of the Public Defender in Twentieth-Century America, consisting of an introduction by Brooke Simone and Aditya Vedapudi, Bennett Capers’s Free-ing Criminal Justice; and Alexis Hoag's The Color of Justice.  Deborah N. Archer revisits James Baldwin’s The Fire Next Time in How Racism Persists in its Power.  Stephanie Toti provides a foreword, The Never-Ending Struggle for Reproductive Rights.

--Dan Ernst

Friday, April 8, 2022

Ablavsky Reviews Amar's "Words That Made Us"

Gregory Ablavsky, Stanford Law School, has posted Akhil Amar's Unusable Past, which is forthcoming in the Michigan Law Review:

This essay reviews Akhil Amar's recent constitutional history of the early United States, The Words That Made Us. In this volume, Amar seeks to offer a "fresh story of America" that provides a "usable past." I argue that the book fails on both fronts. On the contrary, much of what Amar peddles is very old, ignoring generations’ worth of scholarship while parroting a centuries-old nationalist constitutional hagiography. In particular, he believes that constitutional history must be, at core, a referendum on the handful of powerful men dubbed the Founders. His effort to defend them and the Constitution from critics paints him into difficult corners, including endorsing some dubious exculpatory narratives around the exclusion of women, Black people, and Native nations in early America.

One way forward toward a more inclusive, more usable constitutional history, I argue, is in the concept of a "constitutional conversation" that Amar uses to frame his book. In Amar's hands, this conversation becomes a narrow reconstruction of debates among what he calls the "Big Six" Founders. But for a generation, historians and scholars, including many in law schools, have offered a broader vision of the constitutional conversation highlighting how non-elite people, including subordinated groups, accessed and shaped constitutional law. But the work of synthesizing these accounts in a broader constitutional history has only just begun. This work, I argue, will offer both a fuller account of the constitutional conversation and a more usable past for a nation increasingly recognizing that it has always been a diverse and fractious place. 
--Dan Ernst