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Slave Cases and Ingrained Racism in Legal Information Infrastructures

Jennifer Elisa Chapman (University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law, USA)

Antiracist Library and Information Science: Racial Justice and Community

ISBN: 978-1-80262-100-6, eISBN: 978-1-80262-099-3

Publication date: 21 March 2023

Abstract

Present-day courts, practitioners, and scholars continue to cite to and rely upon cases involving slavery and enslaved persons to construe, interpret, and apply common-law principles of property, contract, family, tort, and other areas of the law. Often a case’s connections to slavery are not acknowledged in citations. This erasing of context causes institutional harms by both embedding slave-based legal analysis in American legal structures and condoning the detrimental impacts of slavery in society. The deleterious effects of slavery persist through citations to cases involving enslaved persons to support such prosaic present-day issues as warranties on window glass. Slavery may no longer be legal, but its long shadow persists in citations and, thereby, is embedded in the information systems informing the legal profession. The information infrastructures that categorize case law and inform legal research ingrain racism in the American legal system by perpetuating and masking case law connections to slavery and enslaved persons. The legal profession has recently been criticized for the continued citation to cases that state good law or persuasive authority but are rooted in the institution of slavery. This chapter builds on this important research and contributes a necessary element to the discussion – namely how legal information infrastructures contribute to continuing citation to slave cases and how the library and information science (LIS) field can help institute change and promote racial justice.

Keywords

Citation

Chapman, J.E. (2023), "Slave Cases and Ingrained Racism in Legal Information Infrastructures", Black, K. and Mehra, B. (Ed.) Antiracist Library and Information Science: Racial Justice and Community (Advances in Librarianship, Vol. 52), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 107-121. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0065-283020230000052012

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023 Jennifer Elisa Chapman