The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Frederick Douglass as Natural Rights Originalist
A fascinating new exploration of Frederick Douglass' constitutional thought.
Professor Bradley Rebeiro has an interesting new paper on the constitutional thought of Frederick Douglass, "Frederick Douglass and the Original Originalists." The article is forthcoming in the BYU Law Review, but a draft is available on SSRN.
Here is the abstract:
Constitutional scholars incessantly grapple over the significance of the Constitution's original meaning. More specifically, they are preoccupied with, on the one hand, what that meaning is (if such meaning exists) and, on the other hand, the exact nature of that meaning's authority (if any) over the Constitution and its interpreters. But this debate is hardly novel. In fact, one of the most compelling voices in U.S. history was immersed in similar debates and, out of the constitutional sparring of his time, forged an arresting theory of constitutional interpretation. Frederick Douglass, once a fierce opponent of the U.S. Constitution, evolved into a defender of the Constitution with a robust theory of constitutional interpretation that addressed the constitutional evil of slavery. For example, in 1847, Douglass stated: "The Constitution I hold to be radically and essentially slave-holding . . . [t]he language of the Constitution is you shall be a slave or die." Yet, five years later in his famous speech, "What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?", Douglass declared: "interpreted as it ought to be interpreted, the Constitution is a glorious liberty document." Because Douglass was primarily a political and constitutional actor that never wrote a treatise of jurisprudence, his understanding of constitutionalism must be gleaned from his many speeches and other writings. I therefore take on the task of welding together these speeches and writings to demonstrate how Douglass's theory fuses historical meaning, established legal rules of interpretation, natural rights principles, and a conception of justice into a cohesive approach that addresses the problem of constitutional interpretation and construction.
Though Douglass was one of the most prominent political thinkers and constitutional actors of the 19th century, his constitutional thought has been overlooked by most legal scholars and mostly mischaracterized by political scientists. Due to the aforementioned lack of a singular treatise on the subject, as well as Douglass's constitutional transformation over the course of his life, this comes as no surprise. Legal scholars tend either to dismiss his constitutional theory as incoherent or to assume that Douglass's reformed theory was not sincere, but merely a smokescreen for political purposes. Others have referred to Douglass as a living constitutionalist or offered wholly new categories to explain Douglass's position, such as "reform textualism." However, Douglass's theory, similar to his contemporaries, may be seen as anticipating the modern shift to originalism. But this claim challenges the conventional scholarly wisdom in two ways. First, the current literature mostly characterizes Douglass as, at the very least, anti-originalist. Second, though Douglass's theory shares many elements with originalism, originalism's current formulations leave little room for philosophical inquiry, which Douglass's theory admittedly does. His theory does not fit perfectly into any of the many variations of originalism today, thereby offering present-day originalists new possibilities. I will thus refer to Douglass's theory as "natural rights originalism." Natural rights originalism deviates most importantly in not abandoning the original philosophical principles that animated the Constitution's framing. This theory, the product of an insatiably inquisitive mind, transformed Douglass's constitutional thinking—no longer was the Constitution an instrument of oppression, but one of freedom.
This paper is "highly recommended" by Larry Solum, as is this competing view offered by Jack Balkin and Sandy Levinson. (Alas, this later paper does not engage directly with Rebeiro's work.)
For those who prefer listening to things, Rebeiro discussed his paper as a guest on the Dispatch's Advisory Opinions podcast.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Frederick Douglass continuing to be an example of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more, I notice!
Frank
Quite an interesting read, once you get past the preamble to the main point — roughly the first half. I’m sure all that background is eagerly consumed by the deft legal minds here, but we normies like to skip to the point: what exactly is this “original originalism” and how did it work? The answer turns out to be pretty elegant, in my opinion: where the Constitution is ambiguous, Douglass believed it should be remedied by constructing an interpretation that falls in line with the original ethos of the framers. So, not a “living” Constitution, but also not a dead-letter one.
Example: the Constitution was written to preserve liberty. If at any point it is unclear how it is to be interpreted, one should choose an answer that also preserves liberty.
Well worth thinking about. I’ll have to re-read some of Douglass’ speeches in this light.
Now that I think of it, Douglass’ interpretative principles actually track rather closely in concept to the principles outlined in the Westminster Confession of Faith for how to interpret Scripture:
Interesting!
If that's the first example, the rest isn't worth reading.
Always great to get these dispatches from the clingerverse, though!
This is of course strict Natural Law thinking. See Orestes Brownson making the same point.
This is just Breyer’s active liberty but you call it a name with originalism.
Just skimming through the article…
“Where there is potential ambiguity, instead of remaining strictly in the realm of interpretation, the interpreter enters the construction zone. She must put a thumb on the scale, favoring the meaning that best reflects natural rights principles….
“Natural rights are derived from the natural law. The natural law is discovered through reason and serves as the basis for positive law, which is adopted by reflection and choice. Only positive law properly constrains man’s actions; but the positive law must reflect the natural law, for its violation of the natural law constitutes grounds for nullification….
“Because of justice’s imprecise nature, prudence acts as a mediating element that guides constitutional actors as they pursue justice; constitutional actors must remember that not every harm has a constitutional remedy. Nevertheless, natural rights and justice demand that the text be read as a whole, resolving ambiguities by recurring to the Constitution’s animating natural rights principles.”
This sounds vaguely familiar, as if I’d read something similar quite recently…