I thought that I'd post a few articles from a while back all in one place in case anyone's interested in them.
"Aloha Jurisprudence," from the Oregon Law Review in 2006.
"Confederate Memories and Monuments" from the Columbia Journal of International Affairs in 2006.
"Considering William and Mary's History with Slavery: The Case of President Thomas Dew," from the William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal in 2008.
"Contemplating When Equitable Servitudes Run With the Land," from the St. Louis University Law Review in 2002.
Grave Matters: The Ancient Rights of the Graveyard, from the BYU Law Review in 2006.
Harriet Beecher Stowe's Interpretation of the "Slavery of Politics" in Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp from the Oklahoma City University Law Review in 2000.
"How Missionaries Thought: About Property Law, For Instance," from the University of Hawaii Law Review in 2008.
"Humanity, Utility, and Logic in Southern Legal Thought: Harriet Beecher Stowe's Vision in Dred: A Tale of the Great Dismal Swamp," from the Boston University Law Review in 1998.
"Integrating Spaces: New Perspectives on Race in the Property Curriculum," from the Journal of Legal Education in 2006.
"Ingenium est fateri per quos profeceris: Francis Danial Pastorius' Young Country Clerk's Collection and Anglo-American Legal Literature, 1682-1716," which appeared in the University of Chicago Law School Roundtable in 1996.
"Invisible Man as Literary Analog to Brown v. Board of Education."
"The Law Book in Colonial America," from the Buffalo Law Review in 2003.
"'Let Us Go Back and Stand Upon the Constitution': Federal-State Relations in Scott v. Sanford," from the Columbia Law Review in 1990.
Mrs. Lincoln's Lawyer's Cat: The Future of Legal Scholarship, from the Connecticut Law Review's on-line companion, CONN-templations.
"Necessity Knows No Law:" Vested Rights and the Styles of Reasoning in the Confederate Conscription Cases, from the Mississippi Law Journal in 2000.
"Norms, Law, and Reparations: The Case of the Ku Klux Klan in 1920s Oklahoma," from the Harvard Blackletter Law Journal in 2004.
"The Law of Descent of Thought: Law, History, and Civilization in Antebellum Literary Addresses," from Law and Literature in 2008.
"over and above there broods a portentous shadow -- the shadow of law": Harriet Beecher Stowe's Critique of Slave Law in Uncle Tom's Cabin, from the Journal of Law and Religion in 1995-96.
"Property and Freedom," an essay prepared for a conference at William and Mary in October 2010 about Richard Pipes.
"Property and Progress: Antebellum Landscape Art and Property Law," from the McGeorge Law Review in 2009.
"Foreword: Ralph Ellison and the Law," from the Oklahoma City University Law Review in 2002.
"Realistic Reparations," from the Freedom Center Journal in 2008.
"Reason and Sentiment: The Moral Worlds and Modes of Reasoning of Antebellum Jurists," from the Boston University Law Review in 1999.
"Reconsidering Reparations," from the Indiana Law Journal in 2006.
"The Rule of Law in Antebellum College Literary Addresses: The Case of William Greene," from the Cumberland Law Review in 2000-01.
"The Signaling Value of Law Reviews: An Exploration of Citations and Prestige," from the Florida State Law Review in 2009.
"The Tulsa Race Riot of 1921 in the Oklahoma Supreme Court," from the Oklahoma Law Review in 2001. Here is the appendix, which contains William Redfearn's brief to the Court.
"The University and the Slaves: Apology and Its Meaning," from The Age of Apology (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008).
"Utility, History, and the Rule of Law: The Fugitive Slave Act of 1850 in Antebellum Jurisprudence," from Transformations in American Law History: Essays in Honor of Morton J. Horwitz (Daniel W. Hamilton and Alfred L. Brophy, eds., 2009). And here's a paper from a couple of decades ago on Jacob Rush's jurisprudence ("'religion, the only foundation of government': Jacob Rush and the Federalist Judicial Mind, 1791-1803"). One of these days I'll get back to it.
And here are a couple of recent ones, Twenty-One Months a Slave: Cornelius Sinclair's Odyssey from the Mississippi Law Journal in 2017, The Road to the Gettysburg Address from the Florida State Law Review in 2016; Debating Slavery and Empire in the Washington College Literary Societies, from the Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice in 2016; Land, Slaves, and Bonds: Probate in the Pre-Civil War Shenandoah Valley (with Douglas Thie) from the West Virginia Law Review in 2016; Re-Integrating Spaces: The Possibilities of Common Law Property from the Savannah Law Review in 2015; "The Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Fulcrum of Property Rights," from the Alabama Civil Rights--Civil Liberties Law Review in 2014; The Southern Scholar: Howard College before the Civil War, from the Cumberland Law Review in 2015; "The Nat Turner Trials," from the North Carolina Law Review in 2013; ""Did Formalism Never Exist?" (an essay review of Brian Tamanaha's Beyond the Formalist-Realize Divide) from the Texas Law Review in 2013; "When History Mattered" (an essay review of David Rabban's Law's History) from the Texas Law Review in 2013; "Introducing Applied Legal History" from the Law and History Review in 2013; "The Republics of Liberty and Letters: Progress, Union, and Constitutionalism in Graduation Addresses at the Antebellum University of North Carolina" from the North Carolina Law Review in 2011 Republics of Liberty and Letters; "The most solemn act of my life": Family, Property, Will, and Trust in the Antebellum South, from the Alabama Law Review in 2011; "Overcoming at the Univeristy of Alabama," from the inaugural issue of the Alabama Civil Rights & Civil Liberties Law Review in 2011; and "The Law and Morality of Building Renaming" from the South Texas Law Review in 2010.
And Black Power in the Prison Library , Howard Law Journal (2017).
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