Julia Shih

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The constitutional problem was federalism itself and the Tenth Amendment principle that the states (or “the people”) retained all powers not delegated to the federal government or prohibited to the states. This system offered few opportunities for federal oversight over how state governments managed their own populations. There was no constitutional guarantee that all people living in the United States would be free, or that all free people would enjoy even the most basic rights to personal liberty or due process of law.
Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction
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