Cardozo Law Review
Vol. 17, Iss. 6
Prefatory Matter
Symposia
Bondage, Freedom & (and) the Constitution: The New Slavery Scholarship and Its Impact on Law and Legal Historiography
E. Nathaniel Gates
Opening Address
Stanley N. Katz
The Ten Precepts of American Slavery Jurisprudence: Chief Justice Roger Taney's Defense and Justice Thurgood Marshall's Condemnation of the Precept of Black Inferiority
A. Leon Higginbotham Jr.
The Origins of the Law of Slavery in British North America
William M. Wiecek
Legal Ethics and Fugitive Slaves: The Anthony Burns Case, Judge Loring, and Abolitionist Attorneys
Paul Finkelman
Can a Lawyer Ever Do Right?
Owen M. Fiss
The Hermeneutic of Acceptance and the Discourse of the Grotesque, With a Classroom Excercise on Vichy Law
Richard Weisberg
Allocating Honor and Acting Honorably: Some Reflections Provoked by the Cardozo Conference on Slavery
Sanford Levinson
The Moral Economy of the Purchase of Freedom: Ethical Lessons from the Slave Narratives
Lea VanderVelde
The Unlikely Hero of Dred Scott: Benjamin Robbins Curtis and the Constitutional Law of Slavery
Earl M. Maltz
Comment on Earl Maltz
Kenneth M. Stampp
Comments on James Oakes, “The Compromising Expedient”
Robert A. Burt
The Slavery of Emancipation
Guyora Binder
Comment on Guyora Binder, “The Slavery of Emancipation”
Michael Les Benedict
Bondage, Freedom & the Constitution
Eric Foner
From Slaves to Citizens: African-Americans, Rights Consciousness, and Reconstruction
Donald G. Nieman
Reflections on “From Slaves to Citizens”
Robert J. Kaczorowski
Comment on Donald Nieman's Paper
Randall Kennedy
The Fifteenth Amendment and "Political Rights"
Akhil Reed Amar