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“As if the Injury was Effected by the Natural Elements of Air, or Fire”: Slave Wrongs and the Liability of Masters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2024

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Abstract

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Discussion about slavery and law has been raised recently to a high level of abstraction, but important aspects of the relationship remain unexamined. Under what circumstances were masters held liable for the damage that resulted from the wrongs of slaves? The question of distributing the burdens of accidents is a matter of policy, and involves important questions of power and responsibility. But, within an historical context, the range of choices open to a society is neither infinite nor static. This study suggests that legal traditions, styles of reasoning, and, above all, social relationships and perceptions (including those between slaveholders and nonslaveholders) help unravel the policy choices Southerners made in the years before the Civil War.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1982 The Law and Society Association.

Footnotes

*

The author wishes to thank Joel Grossman, Stewart Macaulay, and the unknown readers of earlier drafts of this article. Their acute criticisms and suggestions helped give it sharper focus and greater clarity. Their assistance has been much appreciated.

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