목차
contents
prologue xiii
introduction xxix
chapter 1 early historical trends 3
chapter 2 the twenty are bought to jamestown 35
chapter 3 the twenty, and blacks in pre-revolutionary new york: invoking "outside law" 49
chapter 4 claims to outside law: hemispheric slave revolts, maroons, and the republic of palmares 77
chapter 5 natural law, international law, jamestown, and the twenty 87
chapter 6 contemporaneous international legal process and african claims and rights 103
chapter 7 lancaster hill's petition at the beginning of the american revolution 143
chapter 8 international law and lancaster hill's claim, through the american revolution 155
chapter 9 african-american interests in the drafting of the international law-related language of the U.S. constitution 181
chapter 10 additional international law provisions of the constitution: the continuation of the fictional narrative 201
chapter 11 drafting the final constitutional provisions under the black fictional narrative 269
chapter 12 african-american claims to outside and international law, 1790-1810: black institution building, federal court cases, and james wilson's jurisprudence 303
chapter 13 african-american claims to international and outside law, 1790-1810: property clauses, fugitive slave laws, the international slave trade, and prosser's rebellion 345
chapter 14 black claims to outside law and international law interests in louisiana territory, 1750-1814 371
chapter 15 the war of 1812: black claims to outside law relative to this war and it settlement 395
chapter 16 the birth of african-american international jurisprudence 441
index 475