Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In this illuminating debut study, Campbell University law professor Gadson argues that violent clashes over state constitutions had a large, and largely overlooked, impact on the American rule of law. Beginning with three upheavals surrounding state constitutional conventions--the 1838 Buckshot War in Pennsylvania, Dorr's Rebellion in 1842 Rhode Island, and 1850s Bleeding Kansas--Gadson shows how contentious political questions that were only vaguely addressed in the federal constitution (e.g.: How is a contested election decided? Should only landowners be allowed to vote?) were fiercely debated during state formation. Each of these cases resulted in open revolt--involving extralegal conventions, unsanctioned elections, and politically motivated violence--that, in Gadson's telling, anticipated the start of the Civil War. The Reconstruction era produced state-level crises accompanied by extreme violence in Arkansas, South Carolina, and North Carolina as new, federally imposed constitutions were picked apart by white politicians trying to disenfranchise Black voters. Though Gadson makes clear how significant these local upheavals were for shaping America on a national level, he finds numerous signs of emerging political violence in present-day events and concludes that the U.S. constitutional order is more vulnerable than many Americans believe. Methodical and troubling, this is a timely reflection on the robustness of the American system. (May)
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Review by Library Journal Review
Gadson (law, Campbell Univ.) explores histories of six U.S. state constitutions in six vignettes, divided into two sections. The first section contains three pre-Civil War examples: 1838's Buckshot War in Pennsylvania, Dorr's rebellion in 1841 Rhode Island, and the 1850s fight in Kansas between Free-Staters and proponents of slavery. Part Two covers incidents occurring after the Civil War: Arkansas's Brooks-Baxter War in 1874, a South Carolina terrorist campaign during Reconstruction, and the Wilmington Insurrection of 1898 in North Carolina. The people and political climates of each example are well researched, creating compelling narratives that illustrate the pressure points within a state constitution, both then and now. Even readers who aren't well versed in U.S. history will recognize how, as the definitions of liberty, equality, and "the people" change, the goals of the reigning political parties also change. The racism, classism, and violence that constituents faced in each of the six states profiled in this volume still exist today. Gadson urges readers to understand their respective state's constitution and not to take the document's existence and effectiveness for granted. VERDICT A relevant, dynamic tool for understanding states' rights; recommended for all collections.--Tina Panik
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