A Compilation of the Penal Code of the State of Georgia
Author: Georgia
Publisher:
Published: 1850
Total Pages: 360
ISBN-13:
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Author: Georgia
Publisher:
Published: 1850
Total Pages: 360
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1910
Total Pages: 892
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1928
Total Pages: 140
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Georgia
Publisher:
Published: 1831
Total Pages: 682
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1938
Total Pages: 102
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DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Andrew Fede
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Published: 2017
Total Pages: 362
ISBN-13: 0820351121
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis comparative study looks at the laws concerning the murder of slaves by their masters and at how these laws were implemented. Andrew T. Fede cites a wide range of cases--across time, place, and circumstance--to illuminate legal, judicial, and other complexities surrounding this regrettably common occurrence. These laws had evolved to limit in different ways the masters' rights to severely punish and even kill their slaves while protecting valuable enslaved people, understood as "property," from wanton destruction by hirers, overseers, and poor whites who did not own slaves. To explore the conflicts of masters' rights with state and colonial laws, Fede shows how slave homicide law evolved and was enforced not only in the United States but also in ancient Roman, Visigoth, Spanish, Portuguese, French, and British jurisdictions. His comparative approach reveals how legal reforms regarding slave homicide in antebellum times, like past reforms dictated by emperors and kings, were the products of changing perceptions of the interests of the public; of the individual slave owners; and of the slave owners' families, heirs, and creditors. Although some slave murders came to be regarded as capital offenses, the laws con-sistently reinforced the second-class status of slaves. This influence, Fede concludes, flowed over into the application of law to free African Americans and would even make itself felt in the legal attitudes that underlay the Jim Crow era.
Author: Andrew T. Fede
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Published: 2024-10
Total Pages: 307
ISBN-13: 0820374563
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA Degraded Caste of Society traces the origins of twenty-first-century cases of interracial violence to the separate and unequal protection principles of the criminal law of enslavement in the southern United States. Andrew T. Fede explains how antebellum appellate court opinions and statutes, when read in a context that includes newspaper articles and trial court and census records, extended this doctrine to the South’s free Black people, consigning them to what South Carolina justice John Belton O’Neall called “a degraded caste of society,” in which they were “in no respect, on a perfect equality with the white man.” This written law either criminalized Black insolence or privileged private white interracial violence, which became a badge of slavery that continued to influence the law in action, contrary to the Constitution’s mandate of equal protection of the criminal law. The U.S. Supreme Court enabled this denial of equal justice, as did Congress, which did not make all private white racially motivated violence a crime until 2009, when it adopted the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act. Fede’s analysis supports that law’s constitutionality under the Thirteenth Amendment, while suggesting why—during the Jim Crow era and beyond—equal protection of the criminal law was not always realized, and why the curse of interracial violence has been a lingering badge of slavery.
Author: Georgia. Attorney-General's Office
Publisher:
Published: 1954
Total Pages: 1024
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Robert Ellis Smith
Publisher: Privacy Journal
Published: 2002
Total Pages: 116
ISBN-13: 9780930072179
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: United States. Army. Office of the Judge Advocate General
Publisher:
Published: 1919
Total Pages: 232
ISBN-13:
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