Building a Revolutionary State: The Legal Transformation of New York, 1776-1783

Author:   Howard Pashman
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226334356


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   12 April 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Building a Revolutionary State: The Legal Transformation of New York, 1776-1783


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Author:   Howard Pashman
Publisher:   The University of Chicago Press
Imprint:   University of Chicago Press
ISBN:  

9780226334356


ISBN 10:   022633435
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   12 April 2018
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

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Reviews

Pashman has given us the first study of how legal order emerged from disorder during the American Revolution. He shows New Yorkers creating local committees to deal with the Loyalists among them and argues convincingly that the legitimacy of the legal institutions that later emerged rested on vigorously expropriating Loyalist property. A powerful statement that the new nation was built, at least in part, on retribution and redistribution. -- Bruce H. Mann, Harvard University Building a Revolutionary State is a refreshingly eye-opening book about a wrinkle in American history long overlooked. It's a testament to dogged research and to a willingness to synthesize a great amount of disparate data to find a new framework for understanding this early moment in the life of the nation. Beyond that, it opens the door for other works to delve deeper into this and other data and to look farther afield at how the process has worked or not worked in other revolutions. In other words, the insurgents in America stumbled on this solution to many of their problems. How have insurgents elsewhere fared? --Patrick T. Reardon, author of Requiem for David and former urban affairs writer for the Chicago Tribune Bruce H. Mann, Harvard University Building a Revolutionary State is a masterful socio-legal history of how New Yorkers transformed the instability and turmoil of the American Revolution into a new, stable legal order. Moving beyond republican ideology and constitutional politics, Pashman uncovers the felt realities of how New York insurgents paradoxically used property redistribution to create popular support for a new source of legal authority. This book will be required reading for anyone interested in the history of American law and state formation. -- Ajay K. Mehrotra, Northwestern University Building a Revolutionary State provides an important bridge to understanding the underlying Anglo-American cultural values represented within property ownership and control. . . . Pashman brings together underutilized sources such as provisional government records, newspaper accounts, local committee minutes, and auction books to discuss how loyalists' property losses helped to strengthen government authority in the revolutionary state of New York. -- The American Historical Review


Pashman has given us the first study of how legal order emerged from disorder during the American Revolution. He shows New Yorkers creating local committees to deal with the Loyalists among them and argues convincingly that the legitimacy of the legal institutions that later emerged rested on vigorously expropriating Loyalist property. A powerful statement that the new nation was built, at least in part, on retribution and redistribution. --Bruce H. Mann, Harvard University Building a Revolutionary State provides an important bridge to understanding the underlying Anglo-American cultural values represented within property ownership and control. . . . Pashman brings together underutilized sources such as provisional government records, newspaper accounts, local committee minutes, and auction books to discuss how loyalists' property losses helped to strengthen government authority in the revolutionary state of New York. --The American Historical Review Building a Revolutionary State is a refreshingly eye-opening book about a wrinkle in American history long overlooked. It's a testament to dogged research and to a willingness to synthesize a great amount of disparate data to find a new framework for understanding this early moment in the life of the nation. Beyond that, it opens the door for other works to delve deeper into this and other data and to look farther afield at how the process has worked or not worked in other revolutions. In other words, the insurgents in America stumbled on this solution to many of their problems. How have insurgents elsewhere fared? --Patrick T. Reardon, author of Requiem for David and former urban affairs writer for the Chicago Tribune Building a Revolutionary State is a masterful socio-legal history of how New Yorkers transformed the instability and turmoil of the American Revolution into a new, stable legal order. Moving beyond republican ideology and constitutional politics, Pashman uncovers the felt realities of how New York insurgents paradoxically used property redistribution to create popular support for a new source of legal authority. This book will be required reading for anyone interested in the history of American law and state formation. --Ajay K. Mehrotra, Northwestern University


Pashman has given us the first study of how legal order emerged from disorder during the American Revolution. He shows New Yorkers creating local committees to deal with the Loyalists among them and argues convincingly that the legitimacy of the legal institutions that later emerged rested on vigorously expropriating Loyalist property. A powerful statement that the new nation was built, at least in part, on retribution and redistribution. --Bruce H. Mann, Harvard University Building a Revolutionary State is a refreshingly eye-opening book about a wrinkle in American history long overlooked. It's a testament to dogged research and to a willingness to synthesize a great amount of disparate data to find a new framework for understanding this early moment in the life of the nation. Beyond that, it opens the door for other works to delve deeper into this and other data and to look farther afield at how the process has worked or not worked in other revolutions. In other words, the insurgents in America stumbled on this solution to many of their problems. How have insurgents elsewhere fared? --Patrick T. Reardon, author of Requiem for David and former urban affairs writer for the Chicago Tribune Building a Revolutionary State is a masterful socio-legal history of how New Yorkers transformed the instability and turmoil of the American Revolution into a new, stable legal order. Moving beyond republican ideology and constitutional politics, Pashman uncovers the felt realities of how New York insurgents paradoxically used property redistribution to create popular support for a new source of legal authority. This book will be required reading for anyone interested in the history of American law and state formation. --Ajay K. Mehrotra, Northwestern University


Author Information

Howard Pashman is an associate attorney at Karlin Associates, LLC in Chicago. He was a research fellow at the Indiana University Center on the Global Legal Profession.

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