Abstract

The articles in this issue are drawn from the papers delivered at the conference “Ab Initio: Law in Early America,” held in Philadelphia on June 16–17, 2010—the first conference in nearly fifteen years to focus on law in early America. It was sponsored by the Penn Legal History Consortium, the McNeil Center for Early American Studies, the American Society for Legal History, the University of Michigan Law School, and the University of Minnesota Law School, under the direction of Sarah Barringer Gordon, Martha S. Jones, William J. Novak, Daniel K. Richter, Richard J. Ross, and Barbara Y. Welke. For two days, fifteen mostly younger scholars presented their research to a packed house, with formal comments by senior scholars and vigorous discussion with the audience. That earlier conference, “The Many Legalities of Early America,” which convened in Williamsburg in 1996, had illustrated the shift from what was once trumpeted as the “new” legal history to something that never acquired a name, perhaps because it was less self-conscious in its methodology. “Ab Initio” offered the opportunity to ask how the field has changed in the years since.

Highlights

  • The Harvard community has made this article openly available

  • Looking back over the last decade and a half, it is clear that the scholarly migration forward in time that was already well under way has continued, much as it has for the field of early American history generally

  • If scholars of early American legal history are moving forward into the nineteenth century, and if the Revolution is receding in the rearview mirror, we should not be tempted to rip out the mirror and say, with a flourish, that what is behind us does not matter

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Summary

Introduction

The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. For a variety of reasons, and with only occasional exceptions, early socio-legal historians rarely looked beyond economic issues to questions of social structure, community, or religion. Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and President of the American Society for Legal History

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