
Constituting Empire
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According to the traditional understanding of American constitutional law, the Revolution produced a new conception of the constitution as a set of restrictions on the power of the state rather than a mere description of governmental roles. Daniel J. Hulsebosch complicates this viewpoint by arguing that American ideas of constitutions were based on British ones and that, in New York, those ideas evolved over the long eighteenth century as New York moved from the periphery of the British Atlantic empire to the center of a new continental empire. Hulsebosch explains how colonists and administrators reconfigured British legal sources to suit their needs in an expanding empire. In this story, familiar characters such as Alexander Hamilton and James Kent appear in a new light as among the nation’s most important framers, and forgotten loyalists such as Superintendent of Indian Affairs Sir William Johnson and lawyer William Smith Jr. are rightly returned to places of prominence. In his paradigm-shifting analysis, Hulsebosch captures the essential paradox at the heart of American constitutional history: the Revolution, which brought political independence and substituted the people for the British crown as the source of legitimate authority, also led to the establishment of a newly powerful constitution and a new postcolonial genre of constitutional law that would have been the envy of the British imperial agents who had struggled to govern the colonies before the Revolution.
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Content
- Intro
- Contents
- Introduction: Constitutions and Empire
- PART I: The Imperial Origins of New York
- 1 Empire and Liberty
- 2 Time Immemorial: The Foundations of Common-Law Culture in an Imperial Province
- PART II: Imperia in Imperio: Property and Sovereignty in a Frontier Province
- 3 The Multiple Constitutions of Empire in New York, 1750-1777
- 4 The Search for Imperial Law in the 1760s
- PART III: Imperial Civil War and Reconstitution
- 5 Provincial Resistance and Garrison Government
- 6 The State Constitution of 1777
- PART IV: Postcolonial Constitutionalism and Transatlantic Legal Culture
- 7 The Imperial Federalist: Ratification and the Creation of Constitutional Law
- 8 Empire State: Constitutional Politics and the Convention of 1821
- 9 An Empire of Law
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Acknowledgments
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
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- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
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- W
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