The United States shares a number of basic traits with various British settler societies in the nonwhite world. These include longstanding histories in which colonists and their descendants divided legal, political, and economic rights between insiders and subordinated outsiders, be they expropriated indigenous groups or racial minorities. But Americans rarely think of themselves as part of an imperial family of settler polities and instead generally conceive of the country as quintessentially anti-imperial and inclusive. What explains this fact and what are its political consequences? This Article offers an initial response, arguing that a significant reason is the symbolic power of the American Federal Constitution in sustaining a particu...
This Article draws on Black American intellectual history to offer an approach to fundamental questi...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The United States has always been more than simply a group of united states. The constitutional hist...
The United States shares a number of basic traits with various British settler societies in the nonw...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...
Some intellectual concepts once central to America\u27s constitutional discourse are, for better and...
This paper argues that the early American republic is best understood as a constitutional experiment...
More than a half-century after the civil rights era, people of color in the United States remain dis...
More than a half-century after the Civil Rights Era, people of color remain disproportionately impov...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...
The U.S. Constitution opens by proclaiming the sovereignty of all citizens: “We the People.” Robert ...
At the beginning of the twentieth century the United States laid claim to an overseas empire, consol...
The U.S. Constitution opens by proclaiming the sovereignty of all citizens: “We the People.” Robert ...
Conventional histories of the Constitution largely omit Natives. This Article challenges this absenc...
The effort to create a colony of African Americans on the west coast of Africa was one of the most c...
This Article draws on Black American intellectual history to offer an approach to fundamental questi...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The United States has always been more than simply a group of united states. The constitutional hist...
The United States shares a number of basic traits with various British settler societies in the nonw...
Americans are debating what it would take to redeem the Constitution’s promise of a “more Perfect Un...
Some intellectual concepts once central to America\u27s constitutional discourse are, for better and...
This paper argues that the early American republic is best understood as a constitutional experiment...
More than a half-century after the civil rights era, people of color in the United States remain dis...
More than a half-century after the Civil Rights Era, people of color remain disproportionately impov...
This Article develops the argument that the Federal Constitution of 1787 was conceptualized, drafted...
The U.S. Constitution opens by proclaiming the sovereignty of all citizens: “We the People.” Robert ...
At the beginning of the twentieth century the United States laid claim to an overseas empire, consol...
The U.S. Constitution opens by proclaiming the sovereignty of all citizens: “We the People.” Robert ...
Conventional histories of the Constitution largely omit Natives. This Article challenges this absenc...
The effort to create a colony of African Americans on the west coast of Africa was one of the most c...
This Article draws on Black American intellectual history to offer an approach to fundamental questi...
This article will be published in the Rutgers Law Journal (forthcoming).Most scholars of constitutio...
The United States has always been more than simply a group of united states. The constitutional hist...