@article{162d16e62ddc4874b36e2501b12ddeef,
title = "State, Citizenship, and Territory: The Legal Construction of Immigrants in Antebellum Massachusetts",
author = "Parker, {Kunal M.}",
note = "Funding Information: Given the staggering human costs associated with citizenship's role as a barrier to the individual's territorial rights, one might expect this aspect Kunal M. Parker is an associate professor of law at the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Cleveland State University. This article was written while the author was a visiting research fellow at the American Bar Foundation (1999-2000). He is grateful to the external reviewers of the Law and History Review and to Christine Desan, Patricia Falk, Ruth Herndon, Patricia McCoy, Gregory Mark, Joanne Melish, and Christopher Tomlins for their comments on earlier versions of this article. He is also grateful to audiences at the American Bar Foundation (1999) and the Law and Society Conference (1999), to the personnel of the Massachusetts Archives, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Archives, and the Massachusetts State Library for assistance in locating documents, to William Knox for research assistance, and to the American Bar Foundation and the Cleveland-Marshall Fund for financial assistance.",
year = "2001",
doi = "10.2307/744274",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "19",
pages = "583--643",
journal = "Law and History Review",
issn = "0738-2480",
publisher = "University of Illinois Press",
number = "3",
}