American Slavery/American Law
- Class number: 12977
- Term: Spring 2013
- Instructor: Newmyer,R. K.
Concentrating on the period from the adoption of the Constitution (1787) through ratification of the 13th Amendment (1865), this course explores the role of law and lawmakers (judges, lawyers and legislators) in the creation and operation of slavery as an institution. The slavery provisions in the Constitution, along with leading state and national judicial decisions concerning slavery and the slave trade, are located in the context of history and historical scholarship. The course also considers resistance to slave law on the part of slaves, as well as efforts by abolitionist lawyers, politicians and constitutional theorists to destroy the institution.
Course Schedule
- Date: Wednesday 2:00-5:00PM
- Location: ST112
Course Information
- Catalog number-Section number: 7914-01
- Course Type: Seminar
- Prerequisites: None
- Credits (min/max): 3/3
- Subjects:
- Course mailing list
Enrollment
- Enrollment status: Open
- Current enrollment/capacity: 12/18
- Reserve population/capacity: 0/0
- Waitlist enrollment/capacity: 0/50
Grading
- Grade basis: Graded
- Satisifies Writing Requirement: No
- Exam type: NO EXAM






