Law, Constitutions, and Governance in American History, 1700–1990

Law, Constitutions, and Governance in American History, 1700–1990

Led by Prof. Gautham Rao (American University)
Course Number: AMHI 627
Semesters: Fall 2025

 

Image: United States Constitution. First printing [Dunlap & Claypoole printing], September 17, 1787. (The Gilder Lehrman Institute, GLC00258)

Scan of the US Constitution, printed in September 1787.

Course Description

How have Americans governed themselves? This is the central inquiry in this course, which spans American history from colonial times until the recent past. We focus on the delicate balance between the people, the law, and the state, amid epochal changes, structural shifts in economy and society, and the rise of new intellectual and jurisprudential frameworks. The course features case studies, including studies about empire, constitutionalism, police power, racism and nativism, civil rights, and rights revolutions to examine how Americans have affixed the location of legal and political authority; to decide who gets to wield legal and constitutional authority; and which parties have been marked off as subjects of state power. Readings draw classics of legal and political thought, as well as powerful new approaches to American legal history. 

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About the Scholar

Gautham Rao, Associate Professor of History, American University

Gautham Rao is a legal historian of early America and the United States. He has been a postdoctoral fellow at the Library Company of Philadelphia and Samuel I. Golieb Fellow in Legal History at the New York University School of Law, and has served as a visiting professor at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris, France. He is the author of National Duties: Custom Houses and the Making of the American State (University of Chicago Press, 2016) and numerous articles and book chapters. He is currently working on a book about the role of slavery in American law. He is also working on a book about the television show The West Wing. He has contributed to historians’ amicus briefs for cases before the Supreme Court of the United States and is editor-in-chief of Law & History Review, the leading scholarly journal of legal history.