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33 Yale J.L. & Human. 1 (2022)

handle is hein.journals/yallh33 and id is 1 raw text is: Judicial Solidarity?
Daniel Farbman*
We are living in a moment where open and principled resistance to law
and legal order are a part of our daily lives. Whether in support of Black
Lives Matter or in opposition to mask mandates, people are in the streets
resisting. Over the last decade, the perception of the fixity of our legal order
has eroded and so, too, has the stability of our consensus that legality and
morality are aligned. In this moment, the visibility and viability of
resistance to law and civil government through social movements have
surged. With the increasing salience of civil resistance resurfaces an old
question: can (and should) judges seek to stand in solidarity with
movements engaging in civil resistance? The classic answers to this
question take two forms. Judges should either enforce the law and punish
the civil resister, or, if they cannot do so in good conscience, they should
resign. These answers position the judge outside of and aloof from the
political and social struggles that the resisters represent. It follows from
this aloof position that judges cannot be in solidarity with civil resistance
aimed at legal change in their official capacity. This Article questions the
stability of the mainstream conclusion. By focusing my attention on judicial
responses to civil resistance against the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850, I
return to one of the most influential sources of our collective sense of
judicial capacity for political resistance. Through my own original archival
research, I revisit Robert Cover's conclusions about judicial timidity in
Justice Accused. Against extensive evidence confirming Cover's bleak view,
I expose and examine one judge's contrary argument. That judge, Ebenezer
Rockwood Hoar, was a neighbor and friend of Henry David Thoreau, and
he wrote in conversation with, not against, the strident views of the famous
advocate of civil disobedience. Hoar proposed that a judge in sympathy
with civil resistance should enforce the law in order to effectuate the power
of the resistance. He argued that making Thoreau's theory of change work
required sympathetic judges to enforce the law to expose its injustice. From
* Assistant Professor, Boston College Law School. Nothing I write would be possible without Brook
Hopkins. I am also in debt to Steven Mueller for his invaluable research assistance. I am grateful for the
constructive help I received from the participants of Harvard Law School Public Law Workshop and the
University of Chicago Public Law Workshop. I am also grateful for the comments and advice of Paulo
Barrozo, Mary Bilder, Niko Bowie, Madison Condon, Dan Coquillette, Hiba Hafiz, Claudia Haupt, Dan
Kanstroom, Steve Koh, Ben Levin, Judy McMorrow, Portia Pedro, John Rappaport, Daphna Renan,
Blaine Saito, Joe Singer, and Susannah Barton Tobin.

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