We use the Southern secession movement of 1860-1861 to study how elites in democracy enact their preferred policies. Most states used specially convened conventions to determine whether or not to secede from the Union. We argue that although the delegates of these conventions were popularly elected, the electoral rules favored slaveholders. Using an original dataset of representation in each convention, we first demonstrate that slave-intensive districts were systematically overrepresented. Slave-holders were also spatially concentrated and could thereby obtain local pluralities in favor of secession more easily. As a result of these electoral biases, less than 10% of the electorate was sufficient to elect a majority of delegates in four o...
In Rebels in the Making: The Secession Crisis and the Birth of the Confederacy, William L. Barney re...
A retrospective study of the role that secessionism played throughout American history, beginning in...
Abstract We have long known that collective decisions are determined not only by the underlying cons...
In the United States, the transition from aristocratic agriculturalism to liberal democratic industr...
The Border South states of Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri spurned secession in 1860-61, ...
This article explores the arguments used by southern secessionists to explain why they left the Unio...
This paper analyzes the rhetoric of appointed state-commissioners from the Southern States advocatin...
Thesis advisor: Marc LandyThe purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that the Civil War was indeed ...
This paper examines the dynamics of the secession. In particular, it asks why political actors decid...
Secessionist conflicts often begin in places abundant with resources and located far from the center...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
We build a simple model of secession crises where a majority of voters may wish to accommodate the m...
The upper south was a region that was in the literal and figurative middle during the secession cris...
Charting Arkansas’ Winding Course To Secession The secession of the Upper South has always been a su...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.In 1869, in Texas v White, the Supreme Court of the ...
In Rebels in the Making: The Secession Crisis and the Birth of the Confederacy, William L. Barney re...
A retrospective study of the role that secessionism played throughout American history, beginning in...
Abstract We have long known that collective decisions are determined not only by the underlying cons...
In the United States, the transition from aristocratic agriculturalism to liberal democratic industr...
The Border South states of Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri spurned secession in 1860-61, ...
This article explores the arguments used by southern secessionists to explain why they left the Unio...
This paper analyzes the rhetoric of appointed state-commissioners from the Southern States advocatin...
Thesis advisor: Marc LandyThe purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that the Civil War was indeed ...
This paper examines the dynamics of the secession. In particular, it asks why political actors decid...
Secessionist conflicts often begin in places abundant with resources and located far from the center...
Interactions Between Slavery and the State Central to the Confederate military effort was the mobili...
We build a simple model of secession crises where a majority of voters may wish to accommodate the m...
The upper south was a region that was in the literal and figurative middle during the secession cris...
Charting Arkansas’ Winding Course To Secession The secession of the Upper South has always been a su...
University of Technology Sydney. Faculty of Law.In 1869, in Texas v White, the Supreme Court of the ...
In Rebels in the Making: The Secession Crisis and the Birth of the Confederacy, William L. Barney re...
A retrospective study of the role that secessionism played throughout American history, beginning in...
Abstract We have long known that collective decisions are determined not only by the underlying cons...