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Americans Without Law: The Racial Boundaries of Citizenship » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of Americans Without Law: The Racial Boundaries of Citizenship by Mark Weiner

Authors: Mark Weiner
ISBN-13: 9780814793640, ISBN-10: 0814793649
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: New York University Press
Date Published: June 2006
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: Mark Weiner

Mark S. Weiner is professor of law at Rutgers School of Law, Newark. He is the author of Black Trials: Citizenship from the Beginnings of Slavery to the End of Caste, winner of the American Bar Association's 2005 Silver Gavel Award.

Book Synopsis

Americans Without Law shows how the racial boundaries of civic life are based on widespread perceptions about the relative capacity of minority groups for legal behavior, which Mark S. Weiner calls "juridical racialism." The book follows the history of this civic discourse by examining the legal status of four minority groups in four successive historical periods: American Indians in the 1880s, Filipinos after the Spanish-American War, Japanese immigrants in the 1920s, and African Americans in the 1940s and 1950s.

Weiner reveals the significance of juridical racialism for each group and, in turn, Americans as a whole by examining the work of anthropological social scientists who developed distinctive ways of understanding racial and legal identity, and through decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court that put these ethno-legal views into practice. Combining history, anthropology, and legal analysis, the book argues that the story of juridical racialism shows how race and citizenship served as a nexus for the professionalization of the social sciences, the growth of national state power, economic modernization, and modern practices of the self.

Table of Contents

1Laws of development, laws of land22
2Teutonic constitutionalism and the Spanish-American war51
3The biological politics of Japanese exclusion81
4Culture, personality, and racial liberalism107

Subjects