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Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Race, Reputation, And The Supreme Court: Valuing Blackness And Whiteness, Fran Lisa Buntman Phd. Oct 2001

Race, Reputation, And The Supreme Court: Valuing Blackness And Whiteness, Fran Lisa Buntman Phd.

University of Miami Law Review

No abstract provided.


Neglected Stories And Civic Space, Peggy Cooper Davis Apr 2001

Neglected Stories And Civic Space, Peggy Cooper Davis

Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice

No abstract provided.


Pause At The Rubicon, John Marshall And Emancipation: Reparations In The Early National Period?, Frances Howell Rudko Jan 2001

Pause At The Rubicon, John Marshall And Emancipation: Reparations In The Early National Period?, Frances Howell Rudko

Faculty Publications

Marshall thought that the solution to emancipation and the end to slavery were to be nationally funded. He considered slavery a national problem, not a state problem, as most of his fellow Virginians insisted. In this he differed from most southerners who argued that slave matters were state matters and that the nation could involve itself in the institution of slavery only by strictly adhering to the role assigned to it by the Constitution under the three fifths clause and the fugitive slave clause.