1,024 research outputs found

    A Fool’s Errand? Legal Legacies of Reconstruction in Two Southern States

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    This Article examines several legal aspects of Reconstruction. It first looks at how the Texas and North Carolina supreme courts helped mediate the transition from a pre-war to a post-war society. Were the courts composed of unconditional Unionists, Conservatives, or a mix? Did they try to help the people of their states accept slav- ery\u27s demise or did they aggravate the sting of defeat? A closely related issue is how Reconstruction lawmakers adjusted the legal rights of blacks following the abolition of slavery. Did they leave a permanent imprint on civil rights law or did they confirm Tourgee\u27s judgment that Reconstruction was ultimately a fool\u27s errand ?\u27 The Article next examines state constitutional history, which is also necessary for a full understanding of Reconstruction\u27s legal legacy. North Carolina\u27s Reconstruction constitution encompassed not only racial reforms but also a variety of attempts to catch up with social and economic reforms enacted in other parts of the nation before the war. Texas\u27s Reconstruction constitution did the same, albeit to a lesser extent, because Texas had already adopted some of the social and economic reforms in question before the war. Texas enacted a new constitution at the end of Reconstruction and North Carolina added extensive amendments to its constitution at the end of Reconstruction, but both states stopped far short of eradicating all Reconstruction-era constitutional reforms. The Article next examines the evolution of economic law in Texas and North Carolina during the Reconstruction era. Reconstruction had profound economic as well as political consequences for the South. A new agricultural labor system had to be developed to replace slavery. Lawmakers had to arrange an orderly transition from the Confederate financial system back to the federal system and respond to problems arising out of the widespread poverty and debt created by the war. By 1865, the Industrial Revolution was well underway in the North, and the Southern states had to decide whether to shape their legal systems to follow suit or to preserve their rural, agricultural pre-war character. Lastly, the Article examines changes in married women\u27s property rights law during Reconstruction. Many Southern women gained an experience of self-sufficiency during the war [that] opened the door a crack to the \u27strong-minded\u27 women. This fact, together with a desire to alleviate post-war economic distress by protecting family assets from creditors, led several ex-Confederate states, including North Carolina, to expand married women\u27s property rights during Reconstruction. Other Confederate states, including Texas, had been leaders in the married women\u27s property rights movement before the war and therefore experienced less change in this area during Reconstruction

    Wisconsin Law in the Age of Individualism

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    The Burdens of All: Progressive Origins of Accident Cost Socialization in Tort Law, 1870-1920

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    Scholars who have studied the Progressive Movement’s contributions to American law have paid little attention to its impact on tort law. This Article helps fill the gap by examining the ways in which Progressivism shaped the rise of employer liability law, workers compensation, and comparative negligence during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries. The Article places these reforms within the broader social history of American tort law—a gradual, often tortuous transition from free-labor beliefs that the law should encourage personal responsibility and economic growth above all else to a realization that injuries are an unavoidable cost of economic modernization, accompanied by a long-running debate over the extent to which the costs of accidents should be socialized
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