Federal Ground: Governing Property and Violence in the First U.S. Territories: Oxford Legal History
Autor Gregory Ablavskyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 iul 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190905699
ISBN-10: 0190905697
Pagini: 362
Dimensiuni: 236 x 165 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Legal History
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190905697
Pagini: 362
Dimensiuni: 236 x 165 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.61 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria Oxford Legal History
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
...there is no denying this is a major contribution deserving a wide academic readership.
With uncommon clarity and breadth, Federal Ground reconsiders essential questions of American statehood, federalism, and politics. Revisiting the origins of U.S. territorial practices of property, Native American policies, and 'conditional admissions' for statehood, Greg Ablavsky exposes the centrality of interior lands to the U.S. constitution's implementation. The results are a major addition to the growing historiography on the Northwest Ordinance and a new, revelatory analysis of the Southwest Territory's equally important place in U.S. history.
No trifling sideshow in American political development, the federal government's shaping of the Northwest and Southwest Territories fashioned the template of America and its state for a century to come. In a masterwork of political and legal history, Greg Ablavsky forces us to rethink the meaning of space, empire, Native dispossession and the very nature of American government.
Federal Ground is a stunning debut by a gifted historian. Greg Ablavsky's path-breaking study will transform the way we understand the emergence of an expansive American empire in the new nation's western borderlands. Lavishing its largesse on the perpetrators as well as the victims of frontier violence, this new American empire and its adjudicatory regime unleashed the creative and destructive energy of market society on a continental scale.
With meticulous research, Greg Ablavsky shows how a complex tapestry of competing land claims led to both nation-building and violence on the frontiers of the American early republic. Written by one of the nation's leading legal historians of property and Native American law, Federal Ground transforms our understanding of federal authority in the territories, and in the process gives us a deeper understanding of the intractable contradictions inherent in today's political world.
A bracingly original, sophisticated, and convincing recasting of the origins of American governance. By establishing itself as the arbiter between states, Indian tribes, French habitants, veterans, and settlers west of the Appalachians in the wake of the American Revolution, the federal government remade itself. Governments, in Greg Ablavsky's telling, become what governments do.
With uncommon clarity and breadth, Federal Ground reconsiders essential questions of American statehood, federalism, and politics. Revisiting the origins of U.S. territorial practices of property, Native American policies, and 'conditional admissions' for statehood, Greg Ablavsky exposes the centrality of interior lands to the U.S. constitution's implementation. The results are a major addition to the growing historiography on the Northwest Ordinance and a new, revelatory analysis of the Southwest Territory's equally important place in U.S. history.
No trifling sideshow in American political development, the federal government's shaping of the Northwest and Southwest Territories fashioned the template of America and its state for a century to come. In a masterwork of political and legal history, Greg Ablavsky forces us to rethink the meaning of space, empire, Native dispossession and the very nature of American government.
Federal Ground is a stunning debut by a gifted historian. Greg Ablavsky's path-breaking study will transform the way we understand the emergence of an expansive American empire in the new nation's western borderlands. Lavishing its largesse on the perpetrators as well as the victims of frontier violence, this new American empire and its adjudicatory regime unleashed the creative and destructive energy of market society on a continental scale.
With meticulous research, Greg Ablavsky shows how a complex tapestry of competing land claims led to both nation-building and violence on the frontiers of the American early republic. Written by one of the nation's leading legal historians of property and Native American law, Federal Ground transforms our understanding of federal authority in the territories, and in the process gives us a deeper understanding of the intractable contradictions inherent in today's political world.
A bracingly original, sophisticated, and convincing recasting of the origins of American governance. By establishing itself as the arbiter between states, Indian tribes, French habitants, veterans, and settlers west of the Appalachians in the wake of the American Revolution, the federal government remade itself. Governments, in Greg Ablavsky's telling, become what governments do.
Notă biografică
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.