13 February 2014

Slave code sources 1


A short reading list on slave codes.

[1] Ingersoll, Thomas N. 1995. Slave codes and judicial practice in New Orleans, 1718–1807. 13 Law & Hist. Rev. 23. 

[2] Thompson, Joseph Conan. 1993. Toward a more humane oppression: Florida's slave codes, 1821-1861. 71 Flor. Hist. Q. 324.

[3] Schnapper, Eric. 1983. Perpetuation of past discrimination. 96 Harv. L. Rev. 828.

[4] Tahmassebi, Stefan B. 1991-1992. Gun control and racism. 2 Geo. Mason U. C.R. L.J. 67.

[5] Nicholson, Bradley J. 1994. Legal borrowing and the origins of slave law in the British colonies. 38 Am. J. Legal Hist. 38.

[6] Mills, Michael P. 2001-2002. Slave law in Mississippi from 1817-1861: Constitutions, codes and cases. 71 Miss. L.J. 153.

[7] Flanigan, Daniel J. 1974. Criminal procedure in slave trials in the antebellum South. 40 J. Southern Hist. 537.

[8] Watson, Larry Darnell. 1980. The quest for order: Enforcing slave codes in revolutionary South Carolina, 1760-1800. PhD diss., U. South Carolina.

[9] Wiecek, William M. 1977. The statutory law of slavery and race in the thirteen mainland colonies of British America. 34 William and Mary Q., Third Series, 258.

[10] Morris, Richard B. 1954. The measure of bondage in the slave states. 41 Miss. Valley Hist. Rev. 219.

[11] Fede, Andrew. 1984. Toward a solution of the slave law dilemma: A critique of Tushnet's "The American Law of Slavery." 2 Law Hist. Rev. 301. 

[12] Blanck, Emily. 2002. Seventeen eighty-three: The turning point in the law of slavery and freedom in Massachusetts. 75 New Engl. Q. 24.

[13] Bush, Jonathan A. 1993. Free to enslave: The foundations of colonial American slave law. 5 Yale J.L. & Human. 417.

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