Federal Ground - Gregory Ablavsky

Federal Ground

Governing Property and Violence in the First U.S. Territories
Buch | Hardcover
362 Seiten
2021
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-090569-9 (ISBN)
44,85 inkl. MwSt
Federal Ground depicts the haphazard and unplanned growth of federal authority in the Northwest and Southwest Territories, the first U.S. territories established under the new territorial system. The nation's foundational documents, particularly the Constitution and the Northwest Ordinance, placed these territories under sole federal jurisdiction and established federal officials to govern them. But, for all their paper authority, these officials rarely controlled events or dictated outcomes. In practice, power in these contested borderlands rested with the regions' pre-existing inhabitants-diverse Native peoples, French villagers, and Anglo-American settlers. These residents nonetheless turned to the new federal government to claim ownership, jurisdiction, protection, and federal money, seeking to obtain rights under federal law.

Two areas of governance proved particularly central: contests over property, where plural sources of title created conflicting land claims, and struggles over the right to use violence, in which customary borderlands practice intersected with the federal government's effort to establish a monopoly on force. Over time, as federal officials improvised ad hoc, largely extrajudicial methods to arbitrate residents' claims, they slowly insinuated federal authority deeper into territorial life. This authority survived even after the former territories became Tennessee and Ohio: although these new states spoke a language of equal footing and autonomy, statehood actually offered former territorial citizens the most effective way yet to make claims on the federal government. The federal government, in short, still could not always prescribe the result in the territories, but it set the terms and language of debate-authority that became the foundation for later, more familiar and bureaucratic incarnations of federal power.

Gregory Ablavsky is associate professor of law and of history (by courtesy) at Stanford University. He has published extensively in law reviews and history journals on the history of sovereignty, territory, and property in the early United States, particularly in the early American West. In 2015, the American Society for Legal History awarded his article The Savage Constitution the Cromwell Prize for the year's best article in American legal history.

Introduction

Part I: Property
Chapter 1: Sources of Title in the Territories
Chapter 2: The Land Company Experiment
Chapter 3: The Rise of Federal Title

Part II: Violence
Chapter 4: Federal Sovereignty
Chapter 5: Laws of War and Peace
Chapter 6: Expenses of Sovereignty

Part III: Statehood
Chapter 7: Equal Footing

Epilogue: Three Systems
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie Oxford Legal History
Verlagsort New York
Sprache englisch
Maße 236 x 165 mm
Gewicht 612 g
Themenwelt Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Militärgeschichte
Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Öffentliches Recht
Recht / Steuern Rechtsgeschichte
ISBN-10 0-19-090569-7 / 0190905697
ISBN-13 978-0-19-090569-9 / 9780190905699
Zustand Neuware
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