Property in the Territories
Author : Benjamin Franklin Wade
Publisher :
Page : 22 pages
File Size : 33,14 MB
Release : 1860
Category : Campaign literature
ISBN :
Author : Benjamin Franklin Wade
Publisher :
Page : 22 pages
File Size : 33,14 MB
Release : 1860
Category : Campaign literature
ISBN :
Author : Gregory Ablavsky
Publisher : Oxford University Press, USA
Page : 361 pages
File Size : 21,17 MB
Release : 2021-02-16
Category : Law
ISBN : 0190905697
Federal Ground depicts the haphazard and unplanned growth of federal authority in the Northwest and Southwest Territories, the first U.S. territories established under the new territorial system. The nation's foundational documents, particularly the Constitution and the Northwest Ordinance, placed these territories under sole federal jurisdiction and established federal officials to govern them. But, for all their paper authority, these officials rarely controlled events or dictated outcomes. In practice, power in these contested borderlands rested with the regions' pre-existing inhabitants-diverse Native peoples, French villagers, and Anglo-American settlers. These residents nonetheless turned to the new federal government to claim ownership, jurisdiction, protection, and federal money, seeking to obtain rights under federal law. Two areas of governance proved particularly central: contests over property, where plural sources of title created conflicting land claims, and struggles over the right to use violence, in which customary borderlands practice intersected with the federal government's effort to establish a monopoly on force. Over time, as federal officials improvised ad hoc, largely extrajudicial methods to arbitrate residents' claims, they slowly insinuated federal authority deeper into territorial life. This authority survived even after the former territories became Tennessee and Ohio: although these new states spoke a language of equal footing and autonomy, statehood actually offered former territorial citizens the most effective way yet to make claims on the federal government. The federal government, in short, still could not always prescribe the result in the territories, but it set the terms and language of debate-authority that became the foundation for later, more familiar and bureaucratic incarnations of federal power.
Author : William D. Coleman
Publisher : UBC Press
Page : 322 pages
File Size : 42,68 MB
Release : 2011-05-10
Category : Political Science
ISBN : 0774820209
In a world of flux, as old territorial borders dissolve and new nations come together, who controls ideas, information, and creativity? Who patrols the new frontiers? This volume opens a window to the dark side of globalization and the struggles for autonomy it has generated from forest disputes to Indigenous land claims to conflicts between farmers and the patent owners of genetically modified seeds. The work of Palestinian poets, whose attachment to the land is explored in a powerful Coda, shows that a politics of place brings to the fore intense feelings of attachment, something common to all struggles over territory and autonomy.
Author : Piergiorgio Di Giminiani
Publisher : University of Arizona Press
Page : 265 pages
File Size : 43,98 MB
Release : 2018-11-20
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0816535523
In 1990, when Augusto Pinochet’s 17-year military dictatorship ended, democratic rule returned to Chile. Since then, Indigenous organizations have mobilized to demand restitution of their ancestral territories seized over the past 150 years. Sentient Lands is a historically grounded ethnography of the Mapuche people’s engagement with state-run reconciliation and land-restitution efforts. Piergiorgio Di Giminiani analyzes environmental relations, property, state power, market forces, and indigeneity to illustrate how land connections are articulated, in both landscape experiences and land claims. Rather than viewing land claims as simply bureaucratic procedures imposed on local understandings and experiences of land connections, Di Giminiani reveals these processes to be disputed practices of world making. Ancestral land formation is set in motion by the entangled principles of Indigenous and legal land ontologies, two very different and sometimes conflicting processes. Indigenous land ontologies are based on a relation between two subjects—land and people—both endowed with sentient abilities. By contrast, legal land ontologies are founded on the principles of property theory, wherein land is an object of possession that can be standardized within a regime of value. Governments also use land claims to domesticate Indigenous geographies into spatial constructs consistent with political and market configurations. Exploring the unexpected effects on political activism and state reparation policies caused by this entanglement of Indigenous and legal land ontologies, Di Giminiani offers a new analytical angle on Indigenous land politics.
Author : Twyman Osmand Abbott
Publisher :
Page : 1276 pages
File Size : 23,79 MB
Release : 1892
Category : Land tenure
ISBN :
Author : Samuel MacClintock
Publisher :
Page : 128 pages
File Size : 37,72 MB
Release : 1909
Category : Aliens
ISBN :
Author : Harold William Vazeille Temperley
Publisher :
Page : 512 pages
File Size : 37,91 MB
Release : 1921
Category : Paris Peace Conference
ISBN :
SCOTT (copy 1: v.1-6): From the John Holmes Library collection.
Author : John Joseph Lalor
Publisher :
Page : 1156 pages
File Size : 22,14 MB
Release : 1890
Category : Economics
ISBN :
Author : John Alexander Logan
Publisher : Diversion Books
Page : 815 pages
File Size : 18,68 MB
Release : 2015-01-20
Category : History
ISBN : 1626816948
To commemorate the 150th Anniversary of the end of the Civil War, Diversion Books is publishing seminal works of the era: stories told by the men and women who led, who fought, and who lived in an America that had come apart at the seams. The events leading up to the Civil War reveal a country divided by more than just a belief in, or revulsion of, slavery. It reveals a country still forming, even as it fissures and breaks apart. It reveals an industrial north and an agricultural south evolving into enemies even as they mutually benefit one another. It reveals politicians playing to their bases, riling up young men especially to take up arms against their fellow countrymen. This astonishing historical work chronicles all this and more, exploring the fractious ideologies and the most important figures who led the country into its bloodiest conflict.
Author : Mariana P. Candido
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 345 pages
File Size : 46,53 MB
Release : 2022-09-29
Category : History
ISBN : 1009059955
Exploring the multifaceted history of dispossession, consumption, and inequality in West Central Africa, Mariana P. Candido presents a bold revisionist history of Angola from the sixteenth century until the Berlin Conference of 1884–5. Synthesising disparate strands of scholarship, including the histories of slavery, land tenure, and gender in West Central Africa, Candido makes a significant contribution to ongoing historical debates. She demonstrates how ideas about dominion and land rights eventually came to inform the appropriation and enslavement of free people and their labour. By centring the experiences of West Central Africans, and especially African women, this book challenges dominant historical narratives, and shows that securing property was a gendered process. Drawing attention to how archives obscure African forms of knowledge and normalize conquest, Candido interrogates simplistic interpretations of ownership and pushes for the decolonization of African history.