1st Edition

People Without Rights (Routledge Revivals) An Interpretation of the Fundamentals of the Law of Slavery in the U.S. South

By Andrew Fede Copyright 1992
    282 Pages
    by Routledge

    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in September 1992, the book traces the nature and development of the fundamental legal relationships among slaves, masters, and third parties. It shows how the colonial and antebellum Southern judges and legislators accommodated slavery’s social relationships into the common law, and how slave law evolved in different states over time in response to social political, economic, and intellectual developments.

    The book states that the law of slavery in the US South treated slaves both as people and property. It reconciles this apparent contradiction by demonstrating that slaves were defined in the law as items of human property without any legal rights. When the lawmakers recognized slaves as people, they burdened slaves with added legal duties and disabilities. This epitomized in legal terms slavery’s oppressive social relationships. The book also illustrates how cases in which the lawmakers recognized slaves as people legitimized slavery’s inhumanity. References in the law to the legal humanity of people held as slaves are shown to be rhetorical devices and cruel ironies that regulated the relative rights of the slaves’ owners and other free people that were embodied in people held as slaves. Thus, it is argued that it never makes sense to think of slave legal rights. This was so even when the lawmakers regulated the individual masters’ rights to treat their slaves as they wished. These regulations advanced policies that the lawmakers perceived to be in the public interest within the context of a slave society.

    1. "The Law as to him is only a Compact between his Rulers," An Interpretation  2. The Legitimizing Role of Law in Slave Society  3. Accommodating Slavery into the Common Law  4. The Non-Legal Background to Three Trends in Antebellum Slave Law  5. The Changing Scope of White Liability for Slave Killing  6. The Changing Scope of White Liability for Non-Fatal Slave Abuse  7. Preventing Slaves from Being a Public Nuisance: Limits on his Master's Rights to Starve and Free his Slaves  8. Slave Criminals and Protection of his Master's Property Rights in Slaves: The Discrimination in the Substantive Law  9. Slave Criminals and Protection of his Master's Property Rights in Slaves: What Process was Due?  10. The Recognition of Slave Humanity to Settle the Rights of Whites that were Embodied in Slaves  11. The Impotence of Slave Humanity as an Impediment to the Separation of Slave Families  12. Conclusion: The Reification of Humanity

    Biography

    Andrew Fede

    `[A] convincing argument that the alleged ‘rights’ of slaves served to protect their masters’ property interests[.]' Manfred Berg, University of Heidelberg, in Historical Justice in International Perspective: How Societies Are Trying to Right the Wrongs of the Past (2009)

    `The legal materials that Fede cites are sufficient support for his central message that slave law was an instrument of oppression concerned with property rights of the master, even when it appeared to recognize the legal personality of the slave …. People Without Rights … is an honest and thoughtful confrontation with the evidence that has been accumulating about the actual operation of the law of slavery, and it is a tonic that we should receive.' Arthur Howington, Shelton State Community College, The Journal of Southern History