Law on the Continent: Judicial Histories and Constitutional Development in North America
MTA
Courts, Constitutionalism, and Legal Pluralism from Colonies to Modern States
2nd Edition
*Law on the Continent: Judicial Histories and Constitutional Development in North America* provides a comprehensive comparative analysis of the legal evolution of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. The book begins by establishing that North American law did not originate with European contact but was layered upon diverse, sophisticated Indigenous legal orders. It traces the imperial legacies of Spain, France, and Britain, showing how civil and common law traditions were adapted to the frontier through diplomacy, treaties, and coercion, creating a persistent condition of legal pluralism across the continent.
The text examines the formation of national legal identities through revolution, confederation, and the establishment of judicial structures. It highlights the distinct constitutional paths taken by each nation: the United States’ entrenchment of judicial review and federalism; Canada’s evolution from British imperial oversight to a homegrown Charter-based rights jurisprudence; and Mexico’s revolutionary social constitutionalism, exemplified by the unique *amparo* remedy. Through a thematic lens, the book explores how these frameworks mediated critical issues such as property regimes, slavery and racial hierarchy, labor relations, and the rise of the administrative state.
Central to the narrative is the ongoing contestation of sovereignty and rights. The book details the legal mechanisms used to dispossess Indigenous peoples—such as the Doctrine of Discovery—while also documenting the modern emergence of reconciliation jurisprudence and the recognition of inherent Indigenous jurisdiction. It further addresses contemporary challenges, including the impact of globalization on trade and borders, the legal implications of the digital revolution, and the role of the judiciary in maintaining democratic resilience against political polarization and environmental crises.
Ultimately, the book presents North American law as a dynamic, intertwined history rather than a single narrative arc. By reading statutes alongside customary norms and court opinions alongside social movements, the author demonstrates that law serves as both a tool of state power and a terrain for community resistance. The work concludes that the future of the continent’s legal systems depends on their ability to evolve and balance competing values of security, liberty, and pluralism in a rapidly changing twenty-first-century landscape.
This book is ideal for law students, legal scholars, and historians seeking a comprehensive understanding of North American legal development. It will particularly benefit those studying comparative constitutional law, Indigenous rights, federalism, and the evolution of judicial systems across the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Legal practitioners working in areas of Aboriginal law, immigration, or transnational issues will find valuable historical context for contemporary legal challenges.
January 19, 2026
105,688 words
7 hours 24 minutes
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