Recognizing human freedom is never as simple as acts of legal pronouncement might suggest. Liberal abstractions like freedom and equality; legal formulations of personhood, free will, and contract; the constructed divisions between public and private, self and other, home and market on which the former are predicated—these are often inadequate to understanding, let alone realizing, the shared aspirations they supposedly define. By the same token, the dense and dynamic relations of power that characterize any liberal society overwhelm and exceed our critical vocabulary. “Racism,” “sexism,” and “capitalism” powerfully name structures of inequality, but they fail to capture the full spectrum of social relations, practices, and exchanges that r...
The fight against slavery was the first international human rights movement, and the elimination of ...
We live in a new Gilded Age. In the years since the 2008 financial crisis, ithas become increasingly...
Beloved, Toni Morrison\u27s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, portrays the ramifications of U.S. legal p...
Recognizing human freedom is never as simple as acts of legal pronouncement might suggest. Liberal a...
Can the concepts and ideas concerning freedom and bondage found within African American Slave narrat...
During the period before the Civil War, courts in non-slave-holding states were sometimes called upo...
2020 forced scholars, policymakers, and activists alike to grapple with the impact of “twin pandemic...
In case after case, prosecutors, judges and juries therefore still struggle to come up with a defini...
Freedom dues were typically payments of money, land, or clothing that masters gave to servants upon ...
This Article examines the manner in which southern courts labored to instill the legal meaning of wh...
Hegel\u27s dialectic of master and slave in the Phenomenology of Mind portrays a master unable to wi...
During the last quarter of the seventeenth century, African slaves were imported into the Americas...
This essay explores the ways in which the right to contract interacted with the free labor ideology ...
Abolitionism was not the monopoly of the North. With the examples of France and Santo Domingo as war...
In this essay, Professor Siegel examines efforts to reform racial and gender status law in the ninet...
The fight against slavery was the first international human rights movement, and the elimination of ...
We live in a new Gilded Age. In the years since the 2008 financial crisis, ithas become increasingly...
Beloved, Toni Morrison\u27s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, portrays the ramifications of U.S. legal p...
Recognizing human freedom is never as simple as acts of legal pronouncement might suggest. Liberal a...
Can the concepts and ideas concerning freedom and bondage found within African American Slave narrat...
During the period before the Civil War, courts in non-slave-holding states were sometimes called upo...
2020 forced scholars, policymakers, and activists alike to grapple with the impact of “twin pandemic...
In case after case, prosecutors, judges and juries therefore still struggle to come up with a defini...
Freedom dues were typically payments of money, land, or clothing that masters gave to servants upon ...
This Article examines the manner in which southern courts labored to instill the legal meaning of wh...
Hegel\u27s dialectic of master and slave in the Phenomenology of Mind portrays a master unable to wi...
During the last quarter of the seventeenth century, African slaves were imported into the Americas...
This essay explores the ways in which the right to contract interacted with the free labor ideology ...
Abolitionism was not the monopoly of the North. With the examples of France and Santo Domingo as war...
In this essay, Professor Siegel examines efforts to reform racial and gender status law in the ninet...
The fight against slavery was the first international human rights movement, and the elimination of ...
We live in a new Gilded Age. In the years since the 2008 financial crisis, ithas become increasingly...
Beloved, Toni Morrison\u27s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, portrays the ramifications of U.S. legal p...