Legal centralization in British America was characterized by the passing of arbitration from the community level to the colonial courts. As a consequence, when the 1765 Stamp Act raised the cost of court business, colonists were at a loss for alternatives. This paper addresses the question of why, at this point, colonists did not return to earlier, non-state forms of arbitration. It offers an explanation by providing a detailed empirical study of an alternative American legal forum: the Philadelphia Quaker monthly meeting. While busy arbitrating disputes in the early colonial period, it declined from around 1720. Contrary to what might be expected, this decline was not the consequence of state efforts to marginalize competing institutions. ...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
Judicial enforcement of debt agreements was one of the central and most important aspects of governm...
During the late seventeenth century the Atlantic trade experienced unprecedented growth. The New Ins...
From the late 17th century, the Religious Society of Friends ( Quakers ) observed a method of resolv...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Some recent writing on the history of American law, notably that of Morton Horwitz, has observed a ...
This article seeks to explore the history of arbitration more in depth by taking a close look at the...
From the late 17th century, the Religious Society of Friends (“Quakers”) observed a method of resolv...
It seems fair to assume that the first American colonists took with them attitudes and practices fro...
This article uses the records of the Bombay Mayor’s Court (1728–1798) to explore the ways in which a...
It is well established that for many centuries, arbitration has been a regular, even frequent, metho...
This article describes and assesses the work of three national courts in regard to arbitration. The ...
The history of binding arbitration in British customary law is very long, and in scope, very broad. ...
In 1786, legal reform activist Benjamin Austin undertook a campaign to promote the use of arbitratio...
One of the earliest international arbitrations in the Americas arose from rival claims to hayfields ...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
Judicial enforcement of debt agreements was one of the central and most important aspects of governm...
During the late seventeenth century the Atlantic trade experienced unprecedented growth. The New Ins...
From the late 17th century, the Religious Society of Friends ( Quakers ) observed a method of resolv...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Some recent writing on the history of American law, notably that of Morton Horwitz, has observed a ...
This article seeks to explore the history of arbitration more in depth by taking a close look at the...
From the late 17th century, the Religious Society of Friends (“Quakers”) observed a method of resolv...
It seems fair to assume that the first American colonists took with them attitudes and practices fro...
This article uses the records of the Bombay Mayor’s Court (1728–1798) to explore the ways in which a...
It is well established that for many centuries, arbitration has been a regular, even frequent, metho...
This article describes and assesses the work of three national courts in regard to arbitration. The ...
The history of binding arbitration in British customary law is very long, and in scope, very broad. ...
In 1786, legal reform activist Benjamin Austin undertook a campaign to promote the use of arbitratio...
One of the earliest international arbitrations in the Americas arose from rival claims to hayfields ...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
Judicial enforcement of debt agreements was one of the central and most important aspects of governm...
During the late seventeenth century the Atlantic trade experienced unprecedented growth. The New Ins...