The Courtroom as Legal Borderland Indigenous and Western Legal Tradition in 1900s Alaska
Approaching the courtroom itself as a legal borderland—both as a place where colonial encounters between…
Approaching the courtroom itself as a legal borderland—both as a place where colonial encounters between…
This panel was inspired by two recent books about Henry Kissinger: the first installment of…
Gregory Ablavsky, among the leading historians of Federal Indian law in the early republic, does…
How we understand age shapes the form of history. Most often, historians use age as…
In Spring 2014, my second year as assistant professor of history at University of Nebraska,…
In 1825, members of the town council of Providence, Rhode Island, made a public—and unusual—complaint.…
A United States provost marshal, a wealthy shoemaker, and one of the largest slave traders…
Working in both law and history, I often encounter historians who express anxiety about treading…
Process is pleased to announce a new series on legal history, including articles about law,…