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25 U. Pa. J. Const. L. Online 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/jclon25 and id is 1 raw text is: 











                         DUTY   TO CONTRACT:
    FREE  LABOR   IDEOLOGY   AND   CONTRACTUAL FREEDOM IN THE
                   POSTBELLUM SOUTH, 1865-1867.


                          Janice Yingzhuang,jiang*

                             INTRODUCTION

    Of the many  questions raised by emancipation,  wrote historian Eric
Foner  in his magnum opus, Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution, none
was more  crucial to the future place of both blacks and whites in Southern
society than how  the region's economy  would  henceforth be organized.1
Few  would  dispute that the official abolition of slavery by the Thirteenth
Amendment brought an end to the Southern economy based primarily on
slave labor, but the more difficult question is what a Southern economy based
on free labor would entail. The natural first step of this transition was to
replace a system of private ownership of humans with an impersonal system
of bargained-for agreements.  Indeed, contract ostensibly reconciled free
choice and social order, and epitomized the principle that legitimate systems
of authority must rest upon consent rather than coercion.2
    This essay explores the ways in which the right to contract interacted with
the free labor ideology at this pivotal moment in American legal history. It
examines  this relationship by looking at the perspectives of four groups of
historical actors: grassroots actors such as anti-slavery activists and ordinary
laborers, legislatures of the former  Confederate   states, agents of the
Freedmen's  Bureau,s and federal lawmakers in the 39th Congress. This essay
argues that, although Congress legislated some of the key grassroots demands
on  a system of free labor and the right to contract through constitutional
amendments   and  federal statutes, enforcement by the Freedmen's Bureau

    Research Editor, Volume 25, University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law; J.D.
    Candidate, 2023, University of Pennsylvania Law School; B.A., History and International
    Relations, 2019, Mount Holyoke College. Thank you to the editors of the University of
    PennsylvaniaJournal of Constitutional Law Online for invaluable editing and comments.
1   ERIC FONER, RECONSTRUCTION: AMERICA'S UNFINISHED REVOLUTION, 1863-1877 at 50
     (1988).
2   Id. at 164.
3   The agency was formally known as the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands.

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