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Christopher L. Tomlins

Christopher L. Tomlins headshot

Research Professor

  • 750 N. Lake Shore Drive
  • 4th Floor
  • Chicago, IL 60611-4557
  • Phone: (312) 988 6553
  • Fax: (312) 988 6579

Education

Ph.D. (History) The Johns Hopkins University

Curriculum vitae

Bio

Christopher Lawrence Tomlins is a Research Professor with a full-time appointment on the research faculty of the American Bar Foundation. He is also adjunct professor of law at Northwestern…

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Research focus

My research has focused on topics in Anglo-American legal history across a broad front, from the “early modern” era (the beginning of the sixteenth century) into the later twentieth century. My current work gathers together  several related fields of inquiry - the history of the relation of master and servant (labor and employment law) from the sixteenth to the early nineteenth centuries; the history of the legal structure of the employment relationship; the historical relationship between migration, labor force creation and law; and the law of slavery and and of civic identity - in a book on the colonization of mainland North America through the end of the eighteenth century that examines in particular the mobilization of law both as a general discourse justifying pan-European colonizing activities and as a means (a technique) to implement specific colonizing practices.  Other current interests include the history of law’s interactions with social science disciplines in general and with the discipline of history in particular, the history of the U.S. Supreme Court, and the history of the concept of police and police power in Anglo-American and European law and politics.   I am developing the latter into a new project on the history of sovereignty and its relationship to American constitutional law. I also have plans to expand current work on the relationship of legal history to the conceptual structure of historical materialism.


Projects

The Cambridge History of Law in America
Latest finding: May 17, 2008, with Michael Grossberg
In 2001, the American Bar Foundation pledged resources to support the production of a multi-volume, multi-contributor history of law in America to be published by Cambridge University Press. The…
Law, Work and Culture in Early America (1600-1800)
Latest finding: May 17, 2008
This research has been examining the legal history of work and labor during the first two centuries of American history. It has been pursued in two phases. Initially it concentrated on the…

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Publications

Cover of The Cambridge History of Law in America
Volume 1, Early America (1580–1815) The Cambridge History of Law in America Volume 1, Early America (1580–1815)
Cambridge University Press
Cover of The Cambridge History of Law in America
Volume 2, The Long Nineteenth Century (1789–1920) The Cambridge History of Law in America Volume 2, The Long Nineteenth Century (1789–1920)
Cambridge University Press
Cover of The Cambridge History of Law in America: Volume 3, The Twentieth Century and After (1920–) The Cambridge History of Law in America: Volume 3, The Twentieth Century and After (1920–)
Cambridge University Press

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Presentations

Toward a Materialist Jurisprudence
Dec 2008
Revolutionary Justice in Brecht, Conrad and Blake
Oct 2008
Discourses of European Intrusion upon the Americas, 1490-1640
Oct 2008

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Professional Service & Recognition

  • Editor, Law and Social Inquiry
  • Editor, Cambridge Historical Studies in American Law and Society
  • Member, Nominations Committee, American Society for Legal History
  • Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Labour/Le Travail