The Making of Tocqueville’s America
Law and Association in the Early United States
The Making of Tocqueville’s America
Law and Association in the Early United States
Butterfield explains that the first generations of American citizens found in the concept of membership—in churches, fraternities, reform societies, labor unions, and private business corporations—a mechanism to balance the tension between collective action and personal autonomy, something they accomplished by emphasizing law and procedural fairness. As this post-Revolutionary procedural culture developed, so too did the legal substructure of American civil society. Tocqueville, then, was wrong to see associations as the training ground for democracy, where people learned to honor one another’s voices and perspectives. Rather, they were the training ground for something no less valuable to the success of the American democratic experiment: increasingly formal and legalistic relations among people.
336 pages | 6 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2015
American Beginnings, 1500-1900
History: American History, History of Ideas
Law and Legal Studies: General Legal Studies
Political Science: American Government and Politics
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: The Concept of Membership in America, 1783–1815
One / Friendship, Formalities, and Membership in Post-Revolutionary America
Two / Politics, Citizenship, and Association
Three / A Common Law of Membership
Part II: Practices and Limits, 1800–1840
Four / Everyday Constitutionalism in a Nation of Joiners
Five / When Shareholders Were Members: The Business Corporation as Voluntary Association
Six / Determining the Rights of Members
Part III: Consequences: Civil Society in Antebellum America
Seven / Labor Unions and an American Law of Membership
Conclusion / The Concept of Membership in the Age of Reform
Notes
Index
Awards
American Society for Legal History: William Nelson Cromwell Foundation Book Prize
Won
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