Studies in Legal History


Collaborative Scholarship

 

Sally Gordon is an acting editor of Studies in Legal History, the book series of the American Society for Legal History, alongside Holly Brewer, Michael Lobban, and Reuel Schiller.

As the author of a book in Studies in Legal History herself — The Mormon Question: Polygamy and Constitutional Conflict in Nineteenth-Century America (University of North Carolina Press, 2002) — Sally is committed to continuing the intensive and supportive collaborations between editor and author that is its hallmark.

In her capacity as Series editor, Sally particularly interested in work in legal history across American national history, including (but not limited to) religion, race, equality, property, suffrage, labor and poverty, as well as on particular areas of legal development, including the common law, legal reform, migration and westward expansion, and families and family structure.

 
 
 

Books edited by Sally Gordon for Studies in Legal History include:

Alejandro de la Fuente & Ariela Gross | Becoming Free, Becoming Black
Sam Erman | Almost Citizens
Martha Jones | Birthright Citizens
Cynthia Nicoletti | Secession on Trial
Karen Tani | States of Dependency
Sophia Lee | The Workplace Constitution

Other Studies in Legal History projects with which Sally was deeply involved include Michelle McKinley, Fractional Freedoms, Michael Schoeppner, Moral Contagion and Mitra Sharafi, Law & Identity in Colonial South Asia.

Sally is currently working with three authors on nineteenth century projects on the law of disability, abolition, and sovereignty.

 
 
 

 
 
 

About the Series

This series aims to publish the highest quality work in legal history by both junior and senior scholars.  Our goal is to produce monographs that take a variety of methodological and theoretical approaches, but always with respect for historical and legal change. The series is dedicated to the understanding of law as both a product of and contributor to history. 

We are interested in questions of how law shapes culture, power, and society, and vice versa, as well as in the people who shape the law, and in how laws shape human choices and how and why it reshapes them over time.  We are sometimes interested as well in purely doctrinal issues, but usually only if they have implications for understanding these larger questions of society, culture, and power.

The editors are committed to working closely and collaboratively with authors to produce both effective and accessible monographs in all fields of the discipline. We are convinced that truly excellent scholarship will remain central to historical work in law, and we will work hard to ensure that authors speak to the broadest audience possible in their books.

 
 

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The Long Road to Freedom

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William Nelson Cromwell Foundation