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- Title
The Fugitive Slave Clause and the Antebellum Constitution.
- Authors
Baker, H. Robert
- Abstract
Among the most long-lasting constitutional controversies in the antebellum era was the interpretation of the fugitive slave clause. It was the subject of repeated legislative and judicial construction at both the state and the federal level. It raised delicate questions about federalism and the balancing of property rights and personal liberty. Slaveholders and abolitionists brought irreconcilable constitutional positions to the table, ultimately dividing Northerners from Southerners. However, it was not just divergent political commitments that made it difficult to fix a stable meaning to the fugitive slave clause. The text itself was ambiguous enough to make it amenable to multiple interpretations. For precisely this reason, an examination of the changing interpretations of the fugitive slave clause uncovers antebellum constitutional praxis, allowing us to see how historical actors interpreted the Constitution and how those interpretations shifted over time.
- Subjects
SOUTHERN States; LEGAL status of fugitive slaves; CONSTITUTIONAL law; PROPERTY rights; FEDERAL government; SLAVEHOLDERS; SLAVERY laws
- Publication
Law & History Review, 2012, Vol 30, Issue 4, p1133
- ISSN
0738-2480
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/S0738248012000697