On July 4, 1852, Frederick Douglass stood in front of a crowd in Rochester, New York, and asked, “What to the slave is t
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The irreducibly constitutional nature of the Civil War’s prelude and legacy is the focus of this absorbing collection of
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A compact, incisive history of one of the defining conflicts of our time Leaving almost half a million dead and displac
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A compact, incisive history of one of the defining conflicts of our time Leaving almost half a million dead and displ
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The first biographical account of the life of James Gillespie Birney in more than fifty years, this fabulously insightfu
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A legal examination of how immigrants rights are - or are not - being protected under the constituion. Throughout Amer
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The principle of equality embedded in the Declaration of Independence and reaffirmed in the Constitution does not distin
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From the Pulitzer Prize–winning historian, an authoritative story of the constitutional changes that built equality into
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By studying the characteristics of those positioned along this fault line during the Civil War, the centrality of the wa
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