HYMAN COLLECTION

FILE BOX #3

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

FILE BOX #3CONSTITUTIONAL LAW Card 1

Dinnerstein, Leonard. “Jews, Released Time, and the Supreme Court” (paper presented before the AHA, 1985) (typescript).

Levinson, Sanford. “The Confrontation of Religious Faith and Civil Religion: Catholics Becoming Justices.” DePaul Law Review 39 (1990): 1047-81.

Shaffer, Thomas L. “On Checking the Artifacts of Canaan: a Comment on Levinson’s ‘Confrontations’.DePaul Law Review 39 (1990): 1133-42.

Solum, Lawrence B. “Faith and Justice.” DePaul Law Review 39 (1990): 1083-1106.

Vogel, Howard J. “The Judicial Oath and the American Creed: Comments on Sanford Levinson’s The Confrontation of Religious Faith and Civil Religion: Catholics Becoming Justices.” DePaul Law Review 39 (1990): 1107-31.

Card 2

Benson, Jane A. “Bibliographic and Reference Sources for Historical Research” (Kent State University Libraries, 1979) (typescript).

Carleton, Don E. “A Cooperative Urban Archives Program: The Houston Metropolitan Research Center.” The Midwestern Archivist 6.2 (1982): 177-95.

Kusch, P. “Style and Styles in Research.” Proceedings of the Robert A. Welch Foundation Conferences on Chemical Research. X. Polymers (Houston, TX, 21-23 Nov. 1966): 257-63.

Card 3

The Blue Book for Visitors, Tourists and Those Seeking a Good Time While in San Antonio, Texas, 1911-1912 (San Antonio, TX: n.d.) (guide to the Red Light District).

Card 4

Friedman, Lawrence M. “A Search for Seizure: Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon in Context.” Law and History Review 4 (Spring 1986): 1-22.

Card 5

Cantor, Milton. Review of Levy’s Origins of the Fifth Amendment: the Right Against Self-Incrimination. University of Pennsylvania Law Review 117.3 (1969): 498-507.

Gernstein, Robert S. “The Demise of Boyd: Self-Incrimination and Private Papers in the Burger Court.” UCLA Law Review 27 (Dec. 1979): 343-97.

 

Levy, Leonard W. “The Right Against Self-Incrimination: History and Judicial History.” Political Science Quarterly 84.1 (1969): 1-29.

Levy, Leonard W. and Lawrence H. Leder. “‘Exotic Fruit’: The Right Against Compulsory Self-Incrimination in Colonial New York.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 20.1 (1963): 3-32.

Card 6

Cogan, Neil H. “‘Standing’ Before the Constitution: Membership in the Community.” Law and History Review 7.1 (1989): 1-21.

Card 7

Eskridge, William N. “Law and the Construction of the Closet: American Regulation of Same-Sex Intimacy, 1880-1946.” Iowa Law Review 82 (1997): 1007-1135.

Card 8

King, Andrew J. “Constructing Gender: Sexual Slander in Nineteenth-Century America.” Law and History Review 13.1 (1995): 63-110.

Spindel, Donna J. “The Law of Words: Verbal Abuse in North Carolina to 1730.” American Journal of Legal History 39 (Jan. 1995): 25-42.

Card 9

Re, Edward D. “Stare Decisis.” Federal Rules Decisions (79 F.R.D. 509).

Card 10

Bender, Thomas. “Making History Whole Again.” New York Times Book Review, 6 Oct. 1985, p1, 42-3.

Monkkonen, Eric H. “The Dangers of Synthesis.” American Historical Review 91 (Dec. 1986): 1146-57.

Parish, Peter J. “American History Arrives in Europe.” New York Times Book Review, 3 Feb. 1985, p.28-9.

Watson, Harry L. “U.S. Local History and the Possibility of National Synthesis” (paper presented to the SHA, 1985) (typescript).

Card 11

Orth, John V. “The Law of Strikes, 1847-1871.” In J.A. Guy and H.G. Beale, Law and Social Change in British History (London: Royal Historical Society, 1984).

Card 12

“Effect of the War on Statutes of Limitation.” Albany Law Journal 3 (25 March 1871): 224-5.

Miscellaneous notes on statute of limitations (two pieces).

U.S. v Muhlenbrink (27 Fed. Cas., Case No. 15,832).

“War–Statute of Limitations.” Albany Law Journal 7 (3 March 1873): 158-9.

White v. Hart (13 Wallace 646).

Card 13

Brisbin, Richard A. “Before Bureaucracy: State Courts and the Administration of Public Services in the Northwest, 1787-1830.” Old Northwest 10 (June 1984): 141-74.

Harris, Peter. “Ecology and Culture in the Communication of Precedent Among State Supreme Courts, 1870-1970.” Law and Society Review 19.3 (1985): 449-86.

Kagan, Robert A., Bliss Cartwright, Lawrence M. Friedman, and Stanton Wheeler. “The Business of State Supreme Courts, 1870-1970.” Stanford Law Review 30 (Nov. 1977): 121-156.

Kagan, Robert A., Bliss Cartwright, Lawrence M. Friedman, and Stanton Wheeler. “The Evolution of State Supreme Courts.” Michigan Law Review 76 (May 1978): 961-1005.

Kagan, Robert A., Bliss Cartwright, Lawrence M. Friedman, and Stanton Wheeler. “State Supreme Courts: a Century of Style and Citation.” Stanford Law Review 33 (May 1981): 773-818.

Card 14

“Separable Controversies: How to Abuse an Act of Congress Without Really Trying” (typescript, n.d.).

Card 15

Birkby, Robert H. “Politics of Accommodation: the Origin of the Supremacy Clause.” Western Political Quarterly 19.1 (1966): 123-35.

Card 16

Richman, Steven M. “More Equal Than Others: State Sovereign Immunity Under the Bankruptcy Code.” Rutgers Law Journal 21 (1990): 603-32.

Card 17

Scheiber, Harry N. “The Impact of Technology on American Legal Development, 1790-1985.” In Colton and Bruchey, ed., Technology, the Economy, and Society (Columbia UP, 1987).

Card 18

Simpson, A.W.B. “The Rise and Fall of the Legal Treatise: Legal Principles and the Forms of Legal Literature.” University of Chicago Law Review 48 (Summer 1981): 632-79.

Card 19

Blum, Walter J., and Harry Kalven. “The Empty Cabinet of Dr. Calabresi: Auto Accidents and General Deterrence.” University of Chicago Law Review 34 (1967): 239-73. Rpt. in Rabin, Robert L. Perspectives on Tort Law (Little, Brown,1983).

Brenner, Joel Franklin. “Nuisance Law and the Industrial Revolution.” Journal of Legal Studies 3.2 (June 1974): 403-33.

Calabresi, Guido. Excerpts from his The Costs of Accidents (Yale UP, 1970). Rpt. in Rabin, Robert L. Perspectives on Tort Law (Little, Brown,1983).

Calabresi, Guido, and Jon T. Hirschoff. “Toward a Test for Strict Liability in Torts.” Yale Law Journal 81 (1972): 1055-84. Rpt. in Rabin, Robert L. Perspectives on Tort Law (Little, Brown,1983).

Campbell, Richard P. “The Protective Order in Products Liability Litigation: Safeguard or Misnomer?” Boston College Law Review 31.4 (1990): 771-836.

Epstein, Richard A. “Intentional Harms.” Journal of Legal Studies 4.2 (June 1975): 391-42.

Epstein, Richard A. “A Theory of Strict Liability.” Journal of Legal Studies 2.1 (1973): 151-204. Rpt. in Rabin, Robert L. Perspectives on Tort Law (Little, Brown,1983).

Friedman, Lawrence M. and Jack Ladinsky. “Social Change and the Law of Industrial Accidents.” Columbia Law Review 67 (1967): 50-82.

Grinder, Robert Dale. “The War Against St. Louis’s Smoke, 1891-1924.” Missouri Historical Review 69.2 (n.d.): 191-205.

Hogan, John C. and Mortimer D. Schwartz. “The False Air of Scholarship.” Whittier Law Review 4 (1982): 191-215.

Horwitz, Morton J. “The Transformation in the Conception of Property in American Law, 1780-1860.” University of Chicago Law Review 40 (Winter 1973): 248-90.

 

Kaczorowski, Robert J. “The Common-Law Background of Nineteenth-Century Tort Law.” Ohio State Law Journal 51 (1990): 1127-99.

Miscellaneous notes on U.S. business and industry (two pieces).

Posner, Richard A. “Strict Liability: a Comment.” Journal of Legal Studies 2.1 (1973): 205-15. Rpt. in Rabin, Robert L. Perspectives on Tort Law (Little, Brown,1983).

Posner, Richard A. “A Theory of Negligence.” Journal of Legal Studies 1.1 (1972): 29-48. Rpt. in Rabin, Robert L. Perspectives on Tort Law (Little, Brown,1983).

Schwartz, Gary T. “Tort Law and the Economy in Nineteenth-Century America: a Reinterpretation.” Yale Law Journal 90.8 (1981): 1717-75.

Seavey, Warren A. “Principles of Torts.” Harvard Law Review 56.1 (1942): 72-98.

White, G. Edward. “The Impact of Legal Science on Tort Law, 1880-1910.” Columbia Law Review 78.2 (1978): 213-57.

White, G. Edward. “The Intellectual Origins of Torts in America.” Yale Law Journal 86 (March 1977): 671-93.

Card 20

Alexander, Gregory S. “The Dead Hand and the Law of Trusts in the Nineteenth Century.” Stanford Law Review 37 (May 1985): 1189-1266.

Card 21

Miller, M. Catherine. “Water Law, Economic Development, and Private Property: a Study in the Problems of Judicial Conflict Resolution in the Twentieth Century West” (paper presented before the ASLH, 1985) (typescript).

Steirer, William. “The Evolution of South Carolina Water Law: a Study in Multi-Causation” (typescript, n.d.).

Card 22

Bakken, Gordon Morris. “The Influence of the West on the Development of Law.” Journal of the West 24 (Jan. 1985): 66-72.

Bloomfield, Max. “Western Lawyers and Judges: Image and Reality” (typescript, 1985 (?)).

Reid, John Phillip. “Some Lessons of Western Legal History.” Western Legal History 1 (Winter/Spring 1988): 3-21.

Scheiber, Harry N. “The Frontier and Legal Culture: Market Values on the Overland Trail (review of Reid’s Law for the Elephant).” New York University Law Review 57 (Dec. 1982): 1209-22.

Card 23

Grossberg, Michael. “Guarding the Altar: Physiological Restrictions and the Rise of State Intervention in Matrimony.” AJLH 26 (July 1982): 197-226.

Card 24

Anthony, Susan B. Excerpt from letter to Charles Sumner, 19 April 1869 (one piece).

Basch, Norma. “The Emerging Legal History of Women in the United States: Property, Divorce, and the Constitution.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 12.1 (1986): 97-117.

Deen, James William. “A Gentle Revolution: the Rise of Legal Adoption in Massachusetts, 1851-1896” (proposal for the doctoral dissertation in the Dept. of History, University of Chicago, 1974) (typescript).

Degler, Carl N. “What Ought To Be and What Was: Women’s Sexuality in the Nineteenth Century.” American Historical Review 79 (Dec. 1974): 1467-90.

Donahue, Charles. “The Case of the Man Who Fell into the Tiber: the Roman Law of Marriage at the Time of the Glossators.” American Journal of Legal History 22 (Jan. 1978): 1-53.

Freedman, Estelle B. “The New Woman: Changing Views of Women in the 1920s.” Journal of American History 61 (Sept. 1974): 372-93.

Grossberg, Michael. “Custody and Guardianship in Antebellum America: the Rise of a Judicial Patriarchy” (paper presented before the ASLH, 1981) (typescript).

Hodges, Lybeth. “The Medieval Woman and the English Law.” E.C. Barksdale Student Lectures: Essays in History (1976-1977): 24-39.

Hogeland, Ronald W. “‘The Female Appendage’: Feminine Life-Styles in America, 1820-1860.” Civil War History 17 (June 1971): 101-14.

Jones, Newton B. “The State Orphan Asylum of South Carolina: an Episode in Reconstruction.” Furman Studies 14 (Nov. 1966): 24-37.

Kawashima, Yasuhide. “Adoption in Early America” (paper presented before the AHA, 1982) (typescript) (see also Card 1.45).

Lebsock, Suzanne D. “Women and Property in the Urban South, 1784-1820” (paper presented before the OAH, 1978) (typescript).

Lucie, Patricia. “Marriage and Law Reform in Nineteenth Century America.” In Elizabeth M. Craik, ed., Marriage and Property (Aberdeen UP, 1968) (includes typescript).

Scott, Anne Firor. “Women’s Perspective on the Patriarchy in the 1850s.” Journal of American History 61 (June 1974): 52-64.

Shorter, Edward. “Female Emancipation, Birth Control, and Fertility in European History.” American Historical Review 78 (June 1973): 605-40.

Smith-Rosenberg, Carroll and Charles Rosenberg. “The Female Animal: Medical and Biological Views of Woman and Her Role in Nineteenth-Century America.” Journal of American History 60 (Sept. 1973): 332-56.

Turner, Elizabeth Hayes. “Women, Religion, and Reform in Galveston, 1880-1920.” In Char Miller and Heywood T. Sanders, ed., Urban Texas: Politics and Development (College Station, TX: Texas A&M UP, 1990).

Tyack, David B. “Why Aren’t You In School? Thoughts on the History of Compulsory Schooling” (paper presented before the AHA, 1974) (typescript).

Card 25

Lucie, Patricia. “American Marriage Law: the Scottish Interests of Joel P. Bishop.” Judicial Review 50 (June 1985): 119-32 (includes typescript).

Zaretsky, Eli. “The Family and the Welfare State, 1890-1920” (typescript, n.d.).

Card 26

Basch, Norma. “Equity vs. Equality: Emerging Concepts of Women’s Political Status in the Age of Jackson.” Journal of the Early Republic 3 (1983): 297-318.

Basch, Norma. “Marriage, Morals, and Politics in the Election of 1828.” Journal of American History 80 (Dec. 1993): 890-918.

Basch, Norma. “Reconstructing Female Citizenship: Minor v. Happersett.” In Donald G. Nieman, ed., The Constitution, Law, and American Life: Critical Aspects of the Nineteenth-Century Experience (U Georgia, 1992).

Basch, Norma. “Relief in the Premises: Divorce as a Woman’s Remedy in New York and Indiana, 1815-1870.” Law and History Review 8.1 (1990): 1-24 (includes typescript).

Basch, Norma. “Relief in the Premises: the Remedial Dimensions of Divorce for Women in New York and Indiana, 1815-1870” (typescript, 1987).

Basch, Norma. “The Victorian Compromise: Divorce in New York City, 1787-1870” (paper presented before the OAH, 1985) (typescript).

Basch, Norma. “Woman Suffrage.” In The Encyclopedia of the American Constitution, supplement I (Macmillan, 1990).

Basch, Norma. “Women and the Law.” Journal of Women’s History 5.1 (1993): 129-35.

Blake, Nelson. Excerpts from his The Road to Reno: a History of Divorce in the United States (Macmillan, 1962).

Censer, Jane Turner. “‘Smiling Through Her Tears’: Ante-Bellum Southern Women and Divorce.” American Journal of Legal History 25 (Jan. 1981): 24-47.

Clark, Elizabeth B. “Matrimonial Bonds: Slavery and Divorce in Nineteenth-Century America.” Law and History Review 8.1 (1990): 25-54.

Driscoll, Dawn-Marie, and Carol R. Goldberg. Excerpts from their Members of the Club: the Coming of Age of Executive Women (Free Press, 1993).

Ferguson, Neal R. “Extraterritorial Recognition of Divorce Decrees in the Nineteenth Century.” American Journal of Legal History 34 (April 1990): 119-67.

Friedman, Lawrence M., and Robert V. Percival. “Who Sues for Divorce? From Fault Through Fiction to Freedom.” Journal of Legal Studies 5 (Jan. 1976): 61-82.

Griswold, (?). “Marital Cruelty and Divorce in Victorian America, 1830-1910” (typescript, n.d.).

Hall, Kermit L. “The Nineteenth-Century Law of Domestic Relations.” In his The Magic Mirror: Law in American History (Oxford UP, 1990).

Hartog, Hendrik. “Custody and Coverture: The Barry Case and American Family Law” (typescript, 1988).

Merritt, Deborah J. “Hypatia in the Patent Office: Women Inventors and the Law, 1865-1900.” Journal of Legal History 35 (1991): 235-306.

Salmon, Marylynn. “The Legal Status of Women in Early America: a Reappraisal.” Law and History Review 1 (1983): 129-51.

Scott, Anne Firor. “Making the Invisible Woman Visible: an Essay Review.” Journal of Southern History 38 (Nov. 1972): 629-38.

Zimmerman, Joan G. “The Jurisprudence of Equality: the Women’s Minimum Wage, the First Equal Rights Amendment, and Adkins v. Children’s Hospital, 1905-1923.” Journal of American History 78 (June 1991): 188-225.

Card 27

Basch, Norma. “A Bridge Between Spheres: the Antebellum Drive for Married Women’s Property Rights” (paper presented before the OAH, 1981) (typescript).

Basch, Norma. “The Legal History of Women in the United States: from the American Revolution to the Progressive Era” (typescript, n.d.).

Burton, June K. “Selected Human Rights Issues Affecting Women in Napoleonic Legal Medicine Textbooks” (paper presented before the SHA, 1984).

Chamallas, Martha, with Linda Kerber. Women, Mothers and the Law of Fright (Legal History Program Working Papers, Series 3:1) (Madison, WI: Institute for Legal Studies, UW-Madison Law School, 1989) (pamphlet).

Chused, Richard H. “The Oregon Donation Act of 1850 and Nineteenth Century Federal Married Women’s Property Law.” Law and History Review 2 (Spring 1984): 44-78.

Hawkes, Joanne V., and M. Carolyn Ellis. “Lady Legislators: the Southern Experience” (paper presented before the AHA, 1985) (typescript).

Jeansonne, Glen. “Women Anti-Communist Leaders in the Age of FDR” (paper presented before the OAH, 1990) (typescript).

Lebsock, Suzanne. “Loopholes: Separate Estates.” In her The Free Women of Petersburg: Status and Culture in a Southern Town, 1784-1860 (Norton, 1984).

Lewis, Judith Schneid. “The Price of a Woman’s Chastity: the Criminal Conversation Procedure in England, 1692-1857” (paper presented before the SHA, 1984) (typescript).

Matsuda, Mari J. “The West and the Legal Status of Women: Explanations of Frontier Feminism.” Journal of the West 24 (Jan. 1985): 47-56.

May, Martha. “‘An Obligation on Every Man’: Masculine Breadwinning and the Law in Nineteenth Century New York” (paper presented before the AHA, 1986) (typescript).

Pease, Jane H., and William H. Pease. “Outline for Ladies, Women, and Wenches: Boston’s and Charleston’s Female Worlds, ca. 1820-1850” (typescript, n.d.).

Rowe, G.S. “Femes Covert and Criminal Prosecution in Eighteenth-Century Pennsylvania.” American Journal of Legal History 32 (April 1988): 138-56.

VanBurkleo, Sandra F. ‘No Rights But Human Rights’: Women and American Legal Culture” (prospectus, n.d.) (typescript).

Card 28

Felt, Jeremy P. Excerpt from his Hostages of Fortune (Syracuse UP, 1965).

Card 29

Burnham, John C. “The Progressive Era Revolution in American Attitudes toward Sex.” Journal of American History 59 (March 1973): 885-908.

Stanley, Amy Dru. “Conjugal Bonds and Wage Labor: Rights of Contract in the Age of Emancipation.” Journal of American History 75 (Sept. 1988): 471-500.

Card 30

Erickson, Nancy S. “Muller v. Oregon Reconsidered: the Origins of a Sex-Based Doctrine of Liberty of Contract” (paper presented before the ASLH, 1983) (typescript).

Erickson, Nancy S. “Sexual Stereotypes in ‘Protective’ Labor Legislation Cases” (paper presented before the Midwest Political Science Association, 1984) (typescript).

Card 31

Freedman, Estelle B. “Sentiment and Discipline: Women’s Prison Experiences in Nineteenth Century America.” Prologue (Winter 1984): 249-59.

Card 32

Brauer, Carl M. “Women Activists, Southern Conservatives, and the Prohibition of Sex Discrimination in Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.” Journal of Southern History 49.1 (1983): 37-56.

Hoff-Wilson, Joan. “Women in American Constitutional History at the Bicentennial” (paper presented before the AHA, 1987) (typescript).

Card 33

Leavitt, Judith Walzer. “‘Science’ Enters the Birthing Room: Obstetrics in American Since the Eighteenth Century.” Journal of American History 70 (Sept. 1983): 281-304.

Card 34

Basch, Norma. “Reconstitutions: History, Gender, and the Fourteenth Amendment” (paper presented before the Conference on the Bicentennial of the American Constitution, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 18-20 May 1987) (typescript).

Basch, Norma. “Relief in the Premises: Divorce as a Woman’s Remedy in New York and Indiana, 1815-1870” (typescript, n.d.).

Chused, Richard H. “Late Nineteenth Century Married Women’s Property Law: Reception of the Early Married Women’s Property Acts by Courts and Legislatures.” American Journal of Legal History 29 (Jan. 1985): 3-35.

Ginsburg, Ruth Bader. “Employment of the Constitution to Advance the Equal Status of Men and Women” (paper presented before the Conference on the Bicentennial of the American Constitution, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 18-20 May 1987) (typescript).

Ginzberg, Lori D. “‘Mortal Suasion Is Moral Balderdash’: Women, Politics, and Social Activism in the 1850s.” Journal of American History 73 (Dec. 1986): 601-622.

Kloppenberg, James T. “The Virtues of Liberalism: Christianity, Republicanism, and Ethics in Early American Political Discourse.” Journal of American History 74 (June 1987): 9-33.

Lebsock, Suzanne D. “Radical Reconstruction and the Property Rights of Southern Women.” Journal of Southern History 43.2 (1977): 195-216.

Note on Frederick Douglass and women’s rights (one piece).

Pugh, Evelyn L. “John Stuart Mill, Harriet Taylor, and Women’s Rights in America, 1850-1873.” Canadian Journal of History 13 (Dec. 1978): 423-42.

Riegel, Robert E. “The Split of the Feminist Movement in 1869.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 49 (Dec. 1962): 485-96.

Shumsky, Neil L. “Tacit Acceptance: Respectable Americans and Segregated Prostitution, 1870-1910.” Journal of Social History 19 (Summer 1986): 665-79.

Stanton, Elizabeth Cady. “Preface.” In her History of Women’s Suffrage (Fowler and Wells, 1881).

“Who Ratified the Constitution?: the Political Loyalties of Women” (typescript, n.d.).

“The Women’s Loyal League” (undated newspaper article, Civil War era).

Wygant, Larry J. “‘A Municipal Broom’: The Woman Suffrage Campaign in Galveston, Texas.” The Houston Review 6 (1984): 117-34.

Card 35

Bradwell v The State (83 US 130).

Excerpt on Bradwell case from (?) (n.d.).

“The Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company v. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.” American Law Review 7 (July 1873): 746-8.

Spector, Robert M. “Woman Against the Law: Myra Bradwell’s Struggle for Admission to the Illinois Bar.” Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 68 (June 1975): 228-42 (typescript).

Tilton, Theodore. “The Constitution a Title-Deed to Woman’s Franchise.” In his Golden Age Tracts, no.2 (NY: Golden Age Press, 1871). Coupled with excerpts from Golden Age Tracts, no. 1 (NY: Golden Age Press, 1871).

Whiteside, Ruth A. “The Law and Mrs. Bradwell: or, the Privileges and Immunities of Sex.” E.C. Barksdale Student Lectures: Essays in History (1976-1977): 107-25.

Card 36

Allen, David W. “Recruitment of Women to State Supreme Courts: Cultural and Economic Conditions” (paper presented before the Midwest Political Science Association, 1985) (typescript).

Card 37

Berry, Mary Frances. “Judging Morality: Sexual Behavior and Legal Consequences in the Late Nineteenth-Century South.” Journal of American History 78 (Dec. 1991): 835-56.

Card 38

Miscellaneous quotes, including:

  • Lawyers are arrogant and think they can do anything, including write history,” stated Professor of Legal History Stanley Katz and ex-Dean of the University of Chicago Law School (New York Times, May 3, 1983): “Well, they can’t.”
  • The end of our exploring will be to arrive where we started and see the place for the first time.” T.S. Eliot, Quartets
  • History: an account mostly false, of events unimportant, which are brought about by rulers mostly knaves, and soldiers mostly fools. Ambrose Bierce
  • America is the only nation in history which miraculously has gone directly from barbarism to degeneration, without the usual interval of civilization. Georges Clemenceau
  • “The trouble with this country is,” observed Herndon, “that there are too many people going about saying, ‘The trouble with this country is–‘.” Sinclair Lewis
  • Federalism: the concept, which, above all others, has served to incapacitate the nation’s conscience.” M.A. DeWolfe Howe, “Federalism and Civil Rights.” MHS Proceedings 77 (1965): 15.
  • A professor is one who talks in someone else’s sleep. W.H. Auden
  • The historian is a prophet looking backwards. A.W. von Schlegel
  • For my part, I consider that it will be found much better by all parties to leave the past to history, especially as I propose to write that history myself. Winston Churchill
  • What experience and history teaches is this–that people and governments have never learnt anything from history or acted on principles deduced from it. G.G. Hegel
  • The new race of academic reviewers may be cleverer, more conscientious, fairer than those who went before and they may take their job more seriously, but they are a complete disaster from everyone’s point of view–publisher, book buyer, writer–because practically no one reads them. It is not just that they assume a higher dedication and a higher level of seriousness than exists among most intelligent, educated novel readers. They are quite simply too dull. Auberon Waugh
  • Then there was the moron who thought a mental institution was a college, but found that in a mental institution you have to show some improvement before you get out. Anonymous

Card 39

Buranelli, Vincent. “The Myth of Anna Zenger.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 13 (April 1956): 157-68.

Choper, Jesse H. “The Scope of National Power Vis-a-Vis the States: the Dispensability of Judicial Review.” Yale Law Journal 86 (1977): 1552-1621.

Clinton, Robert N. “Judges Must Make Law: a Realistic Appraisal of the Judicial Function in a Democratic Society.” Iowa Law Review 67.4 (1982): 712-41.

Currie, David P. “The Constitution in the Supreme Court: the Powers of the Federal Courts, 1801-1835.” University of Chicago Law Review 49 (1982): 646-724.

Dionisopoulos, P. Allan, and Paul Peterson. “Rediscovering the American Origins of Judicial Review: a Rebuttal to the Views Stated by Currie and Other Scholars.” John Marshall Law Review 18 (Fall 1984): 49-76.

Feinberg, Wilfred. “Constraining ‘The Least Dangerous Branch’: the Tradition of Attacks on Judicial Power.” New York University Law Review 59 (May 1984): 252-76.

Hobson, Charles F. “The Negative on State Laws: James Madison, the Constitution, and the Crisis of Republican Government.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series (1979): 216-34.

Hooker, Richard J. Excerpt from his “John Marshall on the Judiciary, the Republicans, and Jefferson, March 4, 1801.” American Historical Review 53 (April 1948): 519.

Klein, Milton M. “Review of Ellis’ The Jeffersonian Crisis.” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 120.1 (1971): 165-72.

Laycock, Douglas. “Taking Constitutions Seriously: a Theory of Judicial Review (review of Ely’s Democracy and Distrust).” Texas Law Review 59 (Feb. 1981): 343-94.

Levinson, Sanford. “Judicial Review and the Problem of the Comprehensible Constitution (review of Choper’s Judicial Review and the National Political Process and Ely’s Democracy and Distrust).” Texas Law Review 59 (Feb. 1981): 395-420.

Levy, Leonard W. “Did the Zenger Case Really Matter? Freedom of the Press in Colonial New York.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 17 (Jan. 1960): 35-50.

Marshall, John. Excerpt from letter to Rufus King, 26 Feb. 1801 (one piece)

Marshall, John. Excerpt from letter to Charles Lee, 7 May 1810 (?) (one piece).

Meigs, William Montgomery. Excerpt from his The Relation of the Judiciary to the Constitution (NY: Neale, 1919)

Mendelson, Wallace. “Jefferson on Judicial Review: a Reply to Professor Krislov.” Journal of Public Law 10 (Spring 1961): 113-24.

Mendelson, Wallace. “Jefferson on Judicial Review: Consistency Through Change.” University of Chicago Law Review 29 (Winter 1962): 327-37.

Mendelson, Wallace. “The Politics of Judicial Supremacy.” Journal of Law and Economics 4 (Oct. 1961): 175-85.

Murphy, Paul L. “Review of Ely’s Democracy and Distrust: a Theory of Judicial Review.” Minnesota Law Review 65.1 (1980): 158-66.

Nelson, William E. “Changing Conceptions of Judicial Review: the Evolution of Constitutional Theory in the States, 1790-1860.” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 120 (1972): 1166-85.

Roche, John P. “Judicial Self-Restraint.” American Political Science Review 49 (Sept. 1955): 762-72.

Rostow, Eugene V. “The Democratic Character of Judicial Review.” Harvard Law Review 66 (Dec. 1952): 193-224.

Smith, William Raymond. “The Necessity of The Circumstances: John Marshall’s Historical Method.” The Historian 26 (Nov. 1963): 19-35.

“The Supreme Court’s Constitutional Commission” (paper prepared for presentation before the OAH, 1987) (typescript).

Thomson, James A. “An Endless but Productive Dialogue: Some Reflections on Efforts to Legitimize Judicial Review (review of Perry’s The Constitution, the Courts, and Human Rights).” Texas Law Review 61 (1982): 743-64.

Card 40

Essay on judicial review (typescript, n.d.).

Card 41

Neuborne, Burt. “Judicial Review and Separation of Powers in France and the United States.” New York University Law Review 57.3 (1982): 363-442.

Card 42

Kurland, Philip B. “The Origins of the National Judiciary.” This Constitution 2 (Spring 1984): 4-8.

Card 43

Cover, Robert M. “The Origins of Judicial Activism in the Protection of Minorities.” Yale Law Journal 91.7 (1982): 1287-1316.

Spector, Robert M. “The Minority Factor in History.” President’s Lecture Series, Worcester State College, Worcester, MA (1980).

Card 44

Cushing, Caleb. Quote on judicial review (n.d.).

Farrand, Max. “The First Hayburn Case, 1792.” American Historical Review 13 (Jan. 1908): 281-5.

Farrand, Max. “The Judiciary Act of 1801.” American Historical Review 5 (Oct. 1899-July 1900): 682-6.

Hatcher, William H. “John Marshall and States’ Rights.” Southern Quarterly 3 (April 1965): 207-16.

Turner, Kathryn. “Federal Policy and the Judiciary Act of 1801.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 22.1 (1965): 3-32.

Warren, Charles. “Legislative and Judicial Attacks on the Supreme Court of the United States: a History of the Twenty-Fifth Section of the Judiciary Act.” American Law Review 47 (Jan./Feb. 1913): 1-34; continued in (March/April 1913): 161-89.

Warren, Charles. “New Light on the History of the Federal Judiciary Act of 1789.” Harvard Law Review 37 (Nov. 1923): 49-132.

Williamson, Rene de Visme. “Political Process or Judicial Process: the Bill of Rights and the Framers of the Constitution.” Journal of Politics 23 (1961): 199-211.

Card 45

Hall, Kermit L. “The ‘Route to Hell’ Retraced: the Impact of Popular Election on the Southern Appellate Judiciary.” In David J. Bodenhamer and James W. Ely, ed., Ambivalent Legacy: a Legal History of the South (1984).

Redish, Martin H. “Constitutional Limitations on Congressional Power to Control Federal Jurisdiction: a Reaction to Professor Sager.” Northwestern University Law Review 77.2 (1982): 143-67.

Card 46

Dworkin, Ronald. “The Idea of Law (chapter from book in preparation, 1983) (typescript).

Dworkin, Ronald. “Law as Integrity” (chapter from book in preparation, 1983) (typescript).

Schauer, Frederick. “An Essay on Constitutional Language.” UCLA Law Review 29 (1982): 797-832.

Card 47

Blawie, James L., and Marilyn J. Blawie. “The Judicial Decision: a Second Look at Certain Assumptions of Behavioral Research.” Western Political Quarterly 18.3 (1965): 579-93.

Cottrol, Robert J. “Static History and Brittle Jurisprudence: Raoul Berger and the Problem of Constitutional Methodology.” Boston College Law Review 26 (March 1985): 353-87.

Kaufman, Irving R. “Judicial Reform in the Next Century.” Stanford Law Review 29 (Nov. 1976): 1-26.

MacCormick, Neil. “On Legal Decisions and Their Consequences: From Dewey to Dworkin.” New York University Law Review 58.2 (1983): 239-58.

White, G. Edward. “The Path of American Jurisprudence.” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 124 (May 1976): 1212-59.

Card 48

Holt, Wythe, and James R. Perry. “Writs and Rights, ‘clashings and animosities’: the First Confrontation Between Federal and State Jurisdictions.” Law and History Review 7 (Spring 1989): 89-120.

Card 49

Johnson, John W. “Adaptive Jurisprudence: Some Dimensions of Early Twentieth-Century American Legal Culture.” The Historian (1978): 16-35.

Stevens, John Paul. “The Life Span of a Judge-Made Rule.” New York University Law Review 58.1 (1983): 1-21.

Card 50

Langbein, John H. “Albion’s Fatal Flaws.” Past and Present 98 (Feb. 1983): 96-120.

Levinson, Sanford. “The Turn Toward Functionalism in Constitutional Theory.” Dayton Law Review 8 (Summer 1983): 567-78.

Tushnet, Mark V. “Following the Rules Laid Down: a Critique of Interpretivism and Neutral Principles.” Harvard Law Review 96.4 (1983): 781-827.

Weiner, Jonathan M. “Marxist History and American Historians, 1959-1969” (paper presented before the OAH, 1983) (typescript).

Card 51

Braden, George D. “The Search for Objectivity in Constitutional Law.” Yale Law Journal 57 (Feb. 1948): 571-94.

Carter, Lief H. “The Supreme Court and the Art of Politics” (paper presented before the APSA, 1985) (typescript).

Cooper, Joseph. Review of Berger’s Congress v. the Supreme Court. Harvard Law Review 85 (Jan. 1972): 702-12.

Dahl, Robert A. “Decision-Making in a Democracy: the Supreme Court as a National Policy-Maker.” Journal of Public Law 6 (1958): 279-95.

Frankfurter, Felix. “The Supreme Court in the Mirror of Justices.” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 105 (April 1957): 781-96.

Lerner, Max. “Constitution and Court As Symbols.” Yale Law Journal 46 (June 1937): 1290-1319.

Mason, Alpheus Thomas. “The Supreme Court: Temple and Forum.” Yale Law Review 48 (Summer 1959): 524-40.

Miller, Arthur S., and Ronald F. Howell. “The Myth of Neutrality in Constitutional Adjudication.” University of Chicago Law Review 27 (Summer 1960): 661-95.

Miscellaneous notes on Supreme Court (five pieces).

Newmyer, Kent. “On Assessing the Court in History: Some Comments on the Roper and Burke Articles.” Stanford Law Review 21 (Feb. 1969): 540-7.

Pritchett, C. Herman. “The President and the Supreme Court.” Journal of Politics 9 (Feb. 1949): 80-92.

Steamer, Robert J. “The Legal and Political Genesis of the Supreme Court.” Political Science Quarterly 77.4 (1962): 546-69.

“The Supreme Court and Political Questions” (typescript, n.d.).

Turner, Kathryn. “The Appointment of Chief Justice Marshall.” William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series, 17 (April 1960): 143-63.

Urofsky, Melvin I. “Myth and Reality: the Supreme Court and Protective Legislation in the Progressive Era.” Supreme Court Yearbook (1983): 53-72.

Card 52

Bill, Shirley Akerman. “‘Full Faith and Credit’ and Early American Federalism.” Journal of World History 11 (1969): 722-54.

Card 53

Dowd, Morgan. “The Influence of Story and Kent on the Development of the Common Law.” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 221-2.

Dunne, Gerald T. “Joseph Story: the Lowering Storm.” American Journal of Legal History 13 (Jan. 1969): 1-41.

Dunne, Gerald T. “Justice Story and the Modern Corporation–a Closing Circle?” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 262-70.

Hollingsworth, Harold M. “Comments on Charles A. Heckman’s Paper, ‘The Relationship of Swift v. Tyson to the Status of Commercial Law in the Nineteenth Century and the Federal System,’ and Donald Roper’s Paper, “James Kent and The Emergence of New York’s Libel Law.” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 256-61.

Horwitz, Morton J. “The Conservative Tradition in the Writing of American Legal History.” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 275-94.

Kent, James. “Autobiographical Sketch of Chancellor Kent.” American Law Record 1.4 (1872): 193-200.

Leslie, William R. “The Influence of Joseph Story’s Theory of the Conflict of Laws on Constitutional Nationalism.” Mississippi Valley Historical Review 35 (June 1948): 203-20.

McClellan, James. “Comments on Kent Newmyer’s Paper, “Justice Joseph Story, the Charles River Bridge Case, and The Crisis of Republicanism.” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 271-4.

Newmyer, Kent. “Joseph Story and the War of 1812: a Judicial Nationalist.” The Historian (Aug. 1964): 486-501.

Newmyer, Kent. “Justice Joseph Story on Circuit and a Neglected Phase of American Legal History.” American Journal of Legal History 14 (April 1970): 112-35.

Newmyer, Kent. “Justice Joseph Story, the Charles River Bridge Case and The Crisis of Republicanism.” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 232-45.

“One of Chancellor Kent’s Notes.” Albany Journal 3 (28 Jan. 1871): 78.

Roper, Donald. “James Kent and The Emergence of New York’s Libel Law.” American Journal of Legal History 17.3 (1973): 223-31.

Shaw, Lemuel. “Profession of the Law in the United States.” American Jurist 3 (Jan. 1833): 56-70.

Story, Joseph. “An Address Delivered Before the Members of the Suffolk Bar, 4 Sept. 1821.” American Jurist 1 (Jan. 1829): 14-34 (missing first pages).

Story, Joseph. Excerpt from his A Discourse Pronounced Upon the Inauguration of the Author, as Dane Professor of Law in Harvard University on the Twenty-Fifth Day of August, 1829 (Boston: Hilliard, Gray, Little, and Wilkins, 1829) (typescript).

Card 54

Note on changes in landlord-tenant law, 1866 (one piece).

Card 55

Benedict, Michael Les. “Laissez-Faire and Liberty: a Re-Evaluation of the Meaning and Origins of Laissez-Faire Constitutionalism.” Law and History Review 3 (Feb. 1985): 293-31.

Card 56

Friedman, Lawrence M. “Law and Small Business in the United States: One Hundred Years of Struggle and Accommodation.” In Stuart Bruchey, ed., Small Business in American Life (NY, 1980).

Scheiber, Harry N. “Public Economic Policy and the American Legal System: Historical Perspectives.” Wisconsin Law Review (1980): 1159-89.

Scheiber, Harry N. “Regulation, Property Rights, and Definition of ‘The Market’: Law and the American Economy.” Journal of Economic History 41 (March 1981): 103-9.

Selvin, Molly. “The Public Trust Doctrine in American Law and Economic Policy, 1789-1920.” Wisconsin Law Review (1980): 1403-42.

Card 57

Armao, Agnes Orsatti. “Devout Legalists: Protestant Reliance on Law in Early Nineteenth-Century America.” American Studies 26 (Feb. 1985): 61-73.

Card 58

“An American Council of Reporters.” Albany Law Journal 2 (9 July 1870): 8-9.

“American Reports.” The Reporters, 4th ed., pp. 561-91.

“American Reports and Reporters.” Albany Law Journal 3 (8 July 1871): 451-2.

Briceland, Alan V. “Ephraim Kirby: Pioneer of American Law Reporting, 1789.” American Journal of Legal History 16 (Oct. 1972): 297-319.

Dunne, Gerald T. “Proprietors–Sometimes Predators: Early Court Reporters.” Supreme Court Yearbook (1976): 61-72.

Joyce, Craig. “The Rise of the Supreme Court Reporter: an Institutional Perspective on Marshall Court Ascendancy.” Michigan Law Review 83 (April 1985): 1291-1391.

Note from American Law Review 2 (Jan. 1868) (one piece).

Surrency, Erwin C. “Law Reports in the United States.” American Journal of Legal History 25 (Jan. 1981): 48-66.

Card 59

“American Law Periodicals.” Albany Law Journal 2 (10 Dec. 1870): 445-50.

Miscellaneous notes on law journals from nineteenth-century periodicals (three pieces).

Reise, Elizabeth. “The Response of the Legal Profession to the Civil War and Reconstruction as Indicated in the Legal Journals” (typescript, 1965).

Card 60

Cooper, Joseph. “Congress and the Legislative Veto: Choices Since the Chadha Decision” (Institute for Policy Analysis, School of Social Sciences, Rice University; Reprint Number 87-1): 31-67.

Cooper, Joseph. “The Legislative Veto in the 1980s” (Institute for Policy Analysis, School of Social Sciences, Rice University; Reprint Number 85-2): 364-89.

Fisher, Louis. “The Legislative Veto: Invalidated, It Survives.” Law and Contemporary Problems 56.4 (1993): 273-92.

Franklin, Daniel Paul. “Why the Legislative Veto Isn’t Dead.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 16 (1986): 491-502.

Card 61

Dan E. Moldea, Appellant v. New York Times Company, Appellee (1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 2685).

Kelly, Alfred H. “Constitutional Liberty and the Law of Libel: a Historian’s View.” American Historical Review 74.2 (1968): 429-52.

Lyall, Sarah. “Partners in Interpretation.” New York Times, 23 March 1994, pB7.

Prosser, William L. “Libel Per Quod.” Virginia Law Review 46.5 (1960): 839-55.

Reisman, David. “Democracy and Defamation: Fair Game and Fair Comment I.” Columbia Law Review 42.7 (1942): 1085-1123; “Democracy and Defamation: Fair Game and Fair Comment II.” Columbia Law Review 42.8 (1942): 1282-1318.

Rosenberg, Norman L. “The Law of Political Libel and Freedom of Press in Nineteenth Century America: an Interpretation.” American Journal of Legal History 17 (Oct. 1973): 336-52.

Card 62

Hyde, Alan. “Is Liberalism Possible? (review of Ackerman’s Social Justice in the Liberal State).” New York University Law Review 57 (Nov. 1982): 1031-58.

Kloppenberg, James T. “The Virtues of Liberalism” (paper presented before the OAH, 1986) (typescript).

Card 63

Benedict, M.L. “The Historian and the Study of Constitutional Liberty in America” (Inaugural Lectures in the Humanities, OSU 1981-2).

Reid, John Phillip. “Liberty and the Original Understanding.” In Essays in the History of Liberty: Seaver Institute Lectures at the Huntington Library (San Marino, CA, 1988): 1-22.

VanBurkleo, Sandra F. Review of Reid’s Concept of Liberty in the Age of the American Revolution (U Chicago, 1988) and Constitutional History of the American Revolution (U Wisconsin, 1986-7). American Journal of Legal History 33 (1989): 378-85.

Card 64

Lindley, Les. “From Spangler (1853) to Fuehrmeyer (1974): the Journal Entry Rule in Illinois” (typescript, n.d.).

Card 65

Hillman, Robert W. “Limited Liability in Historical Perspective.” Washington and Lee Law Review 54 (1997): 615-27.

Card 66

Aung, Htin. “Folk Custom as Law.” In Jon N. Sutherland and Michael S. Werthman, ed. Comparative Concepts of Law and Order (Glenview, Ill., Scott, Foresman, 1971).

Barton, John H. “Beyond the Legal Explosion.” In John Merryman, ed., Stanford Legal Essays (Stanford UP, 1975): 43-60.

Miscellaneous historical statistics on crime and law in the United States (one piece).

Miscellaneous notes on 18th and 19th Century United States law (two pieces).

Murphy, Walter F., and C. Herman Pritchett. “Limitations on Lawsuits.” In their Courts, Judges, and Politics (Random House, 1961): 239-47.

Card 67

Hoffer, Peter Charles. “Honor and the Roots of American Litigiousness.” American Journal of Legal History 33 (Oct. 1989): 295-319.

Card 68

Klein, Milton M. “The Rise of the New York Bar: the Legal Career of William Livingston.” William and Mary Quarterly, third series, 15 (July 1958): 334-58.

Card 69

Billings, Warren M. “Louisiana Legal History and Its Sources: Needs, Opportunities and Approaches.” In Edward Haas, ed. Louisiana’s Legal Heritage (Florida: Perdido Press, 1983): 189-203.

Dargo, George. “Steamboats, Towboats, and Legal Historiography: the Law in Louisiana and the New Nation.” In Edward Haas, ed. Louisiana’s Legal Heritage (Florida: Perdido Press, 1983): 129-41.

Card 70

Mather, Jean. “Loyalty and Legal Qualifications for Office in England, 1640-1660” (paper presented before the ASLH, 1981) (typescript).

Miscellaneous notes on Greenberg and the loyalty oath (one piece).

Card 71

Orth, John V. Review of Stevens’ Law and Politics: the House of Lords as a Judicial Body, 1800-1976. Tulane Law Review 54 (April 1980): 798-808.

Card 72

Blumin, Stuart M. “Origins of the White Collar Middle Class: Work and Social Definition in Antebellum America” (paper presented before the OAH, 1986) (typescript).

Card 73

Notes on United States military law (one piece).

Card 74

Cohler, Anne M. “Moderate and Free Government: the Division of Powers” (paper presented before the Conference on the Bicentennial of the American Constitution, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, 18-20 May 1987) (typescript).

Card 75

Moynihan, Daniel Patrick. The Rule of Law in World Affairs. An Address by Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan before the Installation of Charles Blitzer as Director, National Humanities Center. Research Triangle Park, NC: National Humanities Center, April 23, 1983.

Card 76

Wilkinson, J. Harvie, and G. Edward White. “Constitutional Protection for Personal Lifestyles.” Cornell Law Review 62 (March 1977): 563-625.

Card 77

Black, Donald J. “The Mobilization of Law.” Journal of Legal Studies 2 (Jan. 1973): 125-49.

Fried, Charles. “Right and Wrong: Preliminary Considerations.” Journal of Legal Studies 5 (June 1976): 165-200.

Greenawalt, Kent. “The Enduring Significance of Neutral Principles.” Columbia Law Review 78 (June 1978): 982-1021.

Gusfield, Joseph R. “Power, Justice and Sociological Cynicism (review of Friedman’s The Legal System: a Social Science Perspective).” Stanford Law Review 29 (Jan. 1977): 371-81.

Henkin, Louis. “Infallibility Under Law: Constitutional Balancing.” Columbia Law Review 78 (June 1978): 1022-49.

Roche, John P. “Political Science and Science Fiction.” American Political Science Review 52 (Dec. 1958): 1026-29.

Schubert, Glendon. “The Future of Public Law.” George Washington Law Review 34.4 (1966): 593-614.

Card 78

Schwartz, Bernard. “Contemporary Law: Private Law and Institutions.” In his The Law in America (McGraw-Hill, 1974): 274-311.

Card 79

Guernsey, R.S. “Law Reform: Pleadings in United States and Elsewhere.” New York Daily Register, 20 June 1873 (reprint in pamphlet form).

Card 80

Karl, Barry D. “In Search of National Planning: the Case for a Third New Deal” (paper presented before the OAH, 1983) (typescript).

Card 81

Douglas, William O. “Stare Decisis.” The Record of the Association of the Bar of the City of New York 4 (May 1949): 152-79.

Kempin, Frederick G. “Precedent and Stare Decisis: the Critical Years, 1800 to 1850.” American Journal of Legal History 3 (1959): 28-54.

Klebaner, Benjamin J. “Poverty and Its Relief in American Thought, 1815-61.” Social Service Review 38.4 (1964): 382-99.

Shapiro, Martin. “Toward a Theory of Stare Decisis.” Journal of Legal Studies i (Jan. 1972): 125-34.

Card 82

Leuchtenburg, William E. “The Pertinence of Political History: Reflections on the Significance of the State in America.” Journal of American History 73 (Dec. 1986): 585-600.

Card 83

Engel, David M. “The Oven Bird’s Song: Insiders, Outsiders, and Personal Injuries in an American Community.” Law and Society Review 18.4 (1984): 551-82.

Friedman, Lawrence M., and Thomas D. Russell. “More Civil Wrongs: Personal Injury Litigation, 1901-1910.” American Journal of Legal History 34 (July 1990): 295-314.

Card 84

“The Belknap Case: Limits of the Power of Impeachment.” American Law Review 10 (April 1876): 590-1.

Casper, Gerhard. “On Emergency Powers of the President: Every Inch a King?” (Warner Modular Publication, n.d.).

Corwin, E.S. Excerpt from his The Constitution and What It Means Today (1973 reprint).

Dessayer, Kathryn Marie. “The First Word: the President’s Place in ‘Legislative History’.” Michigan Law Review 89 (Nov. 1990): 399-426.

Friedman, Lawrence M. Excerpts from his History of American Law (New York, 1973) (two pieces).

Kirchheimer, Otto. Excerpt from his Political Justice (Princeton UP, 1961).

Schlesinger, Arthur M. “The Secrecy System” and “The Rise of Presidential War.” In his Imperial Presidency (Boston, 1973).

Typescript essay on presidential power (n.d.).

Von Holst, H. Excerpt from his Constitutional Law of the United States of America (Chicago: Callaghan & Co., 1887).

Card 85

Langbein, John H. “The Origins of Public Prosecution at Common Law.” American Journal of Legal History 17 (Oct. 1973): 313-35.

Card 86

“The Abortion Decisions” (book excerpt, n.d.).

Buchanan, G. Sidney. “The Right of Privacy: Past, Present, and Future.” Ohio Northern University Law Review 16 (1989): 403-510.

“Confidentiality of Personal Information” (typescript, n.d.).

Excerpts on gender and privacy, from book on American legal history (one piece).

Hyman, Ferne B., and Harold M. Hyman. “American Scholars’ Access to Lawyers’ Papers: Research v. Client Confidentiality in the Legal Culture of the United States” (paper presented at Conference on the Cultural Histories of Legal Professions, International Sociological Association, Onati, Spain, July 1998) (typescript).

“Lawyers and the Right to Privacy” (typescript, n.d.).

Marcum, Deanna B. “We Can’t Save Everything.” New York Times, 6 July 1998, pA15.

McCollum, Kelly. “Posting Students’ Social Security Numbers on Web Sites Called a Threat to Privacy.” Chronicle of Higher Education, 12 June 1998, pA28.

“The Ninth Amendment: Unenumerated Rights” (chapter excerpt from book, n.d.) (typescript).

“Privacy in the Digital Age.” New York Times, 6 July 1998, pA14.

“The Right of Privacy: Warren, Brandeis, and the Creation of a Right” (typescript, n.d.).

“The Right to Privacy in Nineteenth Century America.” Harvard Law Review 94 (June 1981): 1892-1910.

Card 87

Bruni, Frank. “Therapist Is Sued for Not Telling of a Patient’s Pedophilia.” New York Times, 19 April 1998, pY24.

Etzioni, Amitai. “Some Privacy, Please, For E-Mail.” New York Times, 23 Nov. 1997, p12.

Giudice, Barbara. “France Reassesses Its History and Its Historical Records.” Chronicle of Higher Education, 17 April 1998, pA53.

Greenhouse, Linda. “A Starr Motion Moves Beyond Political World.” New York Times, 7 June 1998, p1, 17.

“Hillary Clinton Refused to Answer 2 Inquiry Questions.” Houston Chronicle, 30 April 1998, p8A.

Johnston, David. “U.S. Judge is Asked to Bar Testimony by Secret Service.” New York Times, 22 April 1998, pA1, 18.

Lewis, Anthony. “The Grand Inquisitor.” New York Times, 8 June 1998, pA23.

Miller, Harold. “Will Access Restrictions Hold Up In Court? The FBI’s Attempt to Use the Braden Papers at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin.” American Archivist 52 (Spring 1989): 180-90.

Petersen, Melody. “Accountants Want Lawyers’ Secrecy Rights.” New York Times, 11 April 1998, pB1,5.

Review essay on the ninth amendment (typescript).

Smith, Robert Ellis. “The Brandeis-Warren Article 100 Years Later.” Privacy Journal 17.2 (1990): 1, 4-5.

“Software Company Warns Internet Users About Grave Privacy and Security Risks” (advertisement). New York Times, 14 Dec. 1997, pBV11.

Card 88

Palmer, Vernon V. “The History of Privity: the Formative Period (1500-1680).” American Journal of Legal History 33 (Jan. 1989): 3-52.

Card 89

“AHA Statement on Standards of Professional Conduct.” The History Teacher 21.1 (1987): 105-9.

Card 90

“A Citizen.” Property. A Few Questions and Answers About It (n.p., 1867) (pamphlet).

Alexander, Gregory S. “The Concept of Property in Private and Constitutional Law: the Ideology of the Scientific Turn in Legal Analysis.” Columbia Law Review 82.8 (1982): 1545-99.

Bruchey, Stuart. “The Impact of Concern for the Security of Property Rights on the Legal System of the Early American Republic.” Wisconsin Law Review (1980): 1135-58.

Calabresi, Guido, and A. Douglas Melamed. “Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Inalienability: One View of the Cathedral.” Harvard Law Review 85 (1972): 1089-1128.

Demsetz, Harold. “Some Aspects of Property Rights.” Journal of Law and Economics 9 (1966): 61-70.

Demsetz, Harold. “Toward a Theory of Property Rights.” American Economic Review 62 (1967): 347-59.

Dworkin, Ronald. “Hard Cases.” In his Taking Rights Seriously (Harvard, 1978).

Ellickson, Robert C. “Alternatives to Zoning: Covenants, Nuisance Rules, and Fines as Land Use Control.” University of Chicago Law Review 40 (1973): 681-781.

Ely, James W. “Introduction,” “The Place of Property in Framing the Constitution,” and “Property Rights in the Regulatory State.” In his The Guardian of Every Other Right: a Constitutional History of Property Rights (Oxford, 1997) (typescript).

Friedman, Lawrence M. “An American Law of Property” (Chapter V from ?).

Henretta, James A. “The Nineteenth-Century Revolution in Civil Liberties: From ‘Rights in Property’ to ‘Property in Rights.'” This Constitution 19 (Feb. 1991): 13-19.

Henretta, James A. “The Rise and Decline of ‘Democratic Republicanism’: Political Rights in New York and the Several States, 1800-1915.” Albany Law Review 53 (Winter 1989): 357-401.

Horwitz, Morton J. “The Transformation in the Conception of Property in American Law, 1780-1860.” University of Chicago Law Review 40 (Winter 1973): 248-90.

Johnson, Herbert A. “British and American Views of Property and Constitutionalism” (paper presented before the ASLH, 1988) (typescript).

Katz, Stanley N. “Property and the American Revolution: the Law of Inheritance” (Thomas M. Cooley Lecture, University of Michigan Law School, 3 Nov. 1975) (typescript).

Levy, Leonard W. “Property as a Human Right.” Constitutional Commentary 5 (1988): 169-84.

Locke, John. “Of Property.” In his Second Treatise of Civil Government (1690).

Palmer, Robert C. “The Economic and Cultural Impact of the Origins of Property: 1180-1220.” Law and History Review 3 (Feb. 1985): 375-96.

Palmer, Robert C. “The Origins of Property Law in England.” Law and History Review 3 (Feb. 1985): 1-50.

Philbrick, Francis S. “Changing Conceptions of Property in Law.” University of Pennsylvania Law Review 86.7 (1938): 691-732.

Polinsky, A. Mitchell. “Economic Analysis as a Potentially Defective Product: a Buyer’s Guide to Posner’s Economic Analysis of Law.” Harvard Law Review 87 (1974): 1655-81.

Posner, Richard. “The Nature of Economic Reasoning” (Chapter 1 from ?).

Reich, Charles A. “The New Property.” Yale Law Journal 73.5 (1964): 733-87.

Scheiber, Harry N. “Property Law, Expropriation, and Resource Allocation by Government: the United States, 1789-1910.” Journal of Economic History 33.1 (1973): 232-51.

Seipp, David J. “The Concept of Property in the Early Common Law.” Law and History Review 12.1 (1994): 29-91.

Simon, Peter N. “Liberty and Property in the Supreme Court: a Defense of Roth and Perry.” California Law Review 71 (1983): 146-92.

Soifer, Aviam. “Liberty of Contrast: Notes Toward a Contrarian Approach to American Legal History” (typescript, 1989).

White, G. Edward. “The Intellectual Origins of Torts in America.” Yale Law Journal 86.4 (1977) (reprint).

Card 91

Springer, James Warren. “American Indians and the Law of Real Property in Colonial New England.” American Journal of Legal History 30 (Jan. 1986): 25-58.

Card 92

Samaha, Joel B. “The Recognizance in Elizabethan Law Enforcement.” American Journal of Legal History 25 (July 1981): 189-204.

Card 93

Professional Association of College Educators and James Semones, Appellants, v. El Paso County Community College District, Appellee. Brief for Appellants.

Card 94

Marquart, James W., and Ben M. Crouch. “Judicial Reform and Prisoner Control: the Impact of Ruiz v. Estelle on a Texas Penitentiary.” Law and Society Review 19.4 (1985): 557-86.

Card 95

Rabin, Robert L. “Federal Regulation in Historical Perspective.” Stanford Law Review 38.5 (1986): 1189-1430.

Card 96

Colten, Naomi W. “‘The United States a Christian Nation’: the Jewish Response to Justice Brewer” (paper presented before the AHA, 1985) (typescript).

Card 97

Hurvitz, Haggai. “American Labor Law and the Doctrine of Entrepreneurial Property Rights: Boycotts, Courts, and the Juridical Reorientation of 1886-1895.” Industrial Relations Law Journal 8.1 (1986): 307-61.

Card 98

Scheiber, Harry N. “Public Rights and the Rule of Law in American Legal History.” California Law Review 72 (1984): 217-51.

Williams, Joan. “The Development of the Public/Private Distinction in American Law (review of Hartog’s Public Property and Private Power).” Texas Law Review 64 (1985): 225-50.

 

 

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