Cardozo Law Review
Vol. 18, Iss. 2
Bondage, Freedom & the Constitution: The New Slavery Scholarship and Its Impact on Law and Legal Historiography: Part II
Part I published in the Cardozo Law Review, volume 17, issue 6.
Prefatory Matter
Symposia
“Like Master, Like Man”: Constructing Whiteness in the Commercial Law of Slavery, 1800-1861
Ariela J. Gross
New Histories of the Private Law of Slavery
Mark Tushnet
Property, Parenthood, and Peonage: Reflections on the Return to Status Quo Antebellum
Margaret A. Burnham
“So Tall Within” - The Legacy of Sojourner Truth
Peggy Cooper Davis
A New Image of the Slave Auction: An Empirical Look at the Role of Law in Slave Sales and a Conceptual Reevaluation of Slave Property
Thomas D. Russell
Hegel’s Slaves, Blackstone’s Objects, and Hohfeld’s Ghosts: A Comment on Thomas Russell’s Imagery of Slave Auctions
Jeanne L. Schroeder
Comment on Hans Baade’s The Gens de Couleur of Louisiana: Comparative Slave Law in Microcosm
Morris S. Arnold
The First Slave (And Why He Matters)
Jonathan A. Bush
“Under the Present Mode of Trial, Improper Verdicts Are Very Often Given”: Criminal Procedure in the Trials of Slaves in Antebellum Louisiana
Judith Kelleher Schafer
“Doubly Condemned”: Adjustments to the Crime and Punishment Regime in the Late Slavery Period in the British Caribbean Colonies
Anthony De V. Phillips
Outlawing Outcasts: Comparative Perspectives on the Differing Functions of the Criminal Law of Slavery in the Americas
Robert J. Cottrol
Abolitionist Feminism, Moral Slavery, and the Constitution: “On the Same Platform of Human Rights”
David A.J. Richards
Estranged Fruit: The Reconstruction Amendments, Moral Slavery, and the Rearticulation of Lesbian and Gay Identity
E. Nathaniel Gates