In civil cases that took place in southern courts from the end of the Civil War to the mid-twentieth century, black men and women frequently chose to bring litigation and then negotiated the white-dominated legal system to shape their cases and assert rights. In some ways, these civil cases were diametrically opposite from the criminal cases of black defendants who did not choose to enter a courtroom and often received unequal justice. However, this article draws on almost 2,000 cases involving black litigants in eight state supreme courts across the South between 1865 to 1950 to argue that in both civil and criminal cases African Americans were at times shaping their cases and fighting for their rights, as well as obtaining decisions that ...
The historical past of the United States of America is one thatremains present, however, specificall...
Although landmark Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade have great...
On 14 June 1895, an aging white farmer, Edward Pollard, returned from his fields to find the body hi...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
In a largely previously untold story, Melissa Milewski explores how, when the financial futures of t...
For years, black southerners’ ability to vote has been a key framework around which southern history...
Race and the Law in South Carolina carefully reconstructs the social history behind six legal disput...
This essay analyses the trial records of civil cases between former slaves and their former slavehol...
Kimberly Welch has written a superb book. In Black Litigants in the Antebellum American South, Welch...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
This Article presents an empirical analysis of how race, income inequality, the regional history of ...
"People at Law: Subordinate Southerners, Popular Governance, and Local Legal Culture in Antebellum ...
This essay tells the story of Scottsboro, one of the most important legal events of the twentieth ce...
This Article explores a startling and previously unnoticed line of cases in which state courts in th...
The historical past of the United States of America is one thatremains present, however, specificall...
Although landmark Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade have great...
On 14 June 1895, an aging white farmer, Edward Pollard, returned from his fields to find the body hi...
This article draws on more than 600 higher court cases in eight southern states to show that African...
In a largely previously untold story, Melissa Milewski explores how, when the financial futures of t...
For years, black southerners’ ability to vote has been a key framework around which southern history...
Race and the Law in South Carolina carefully reconstructs the social history behind six legal disput...
This essay analyses the trial records of civil cases between former slaves and their former slavehol...
Kimberly Welch has written a superb book. In Black Litigants in the Antebellum American South, Welch...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
This article provides an analysis of how slave women, during the period from the American Revolution...
This Article presents an empirical analysis of how race, income inequality, the regional history of ...
"People at Law: Subordinate Southerners, Popular Governance, and Local Legal Culture in Antebellum ...
This essay tells the story of Scottsboro, one of the most important legal events of the twentieth ce...
This Article explores a startling and previously unnoticed line of cases in which state courts in th...
The historical past of the United States of America is one thatremains present, however, specificall...
Although landmark Supreme Court cases such as Brown v. Board of Education and Roe v. Wade have great...
On 14 June 1895, an aging white farmer, Edward Pollard, returned from his fields to find the body hi...