Privileges or Immunities: Academic Resources
After the Civil War, free blacks and former Union soldiers faced serious danger from Southern state governments that stripped them of economic liberty and their right to bear arms, leaving them vulnerable to virtual enslavement and hate-motivated crime. The Privileges or Immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in 1868, was written to address these abuses by ensuring that rights guaranteed in the federal constitution are protected against the states. Seven years after ratification, however, the amendment's Privileges or Immunities clause was practically nullified by the Slaughter-House decision. Today, that judicial error continues to take its toll on important freedoms like economic liberty: unenumerated rights that are left vulnerable to government abuse without the protection of the Privileges or Immunities clause.
Economic liberty is one of the pillars of constitutional freedom defended by the Institute for Justice. A new case going before the Supreme Court, McDonald v. City of Chicago, provides a unique opportunity to restore the Privileges or Immunities clause to its full meaning. The Institute for Justice has filed two briefs in this case to support the reconstitution of this important protection from government intrusion on economic liberty and the right to bear arms.
Collected below are primary sources and scholarly publications on the history of the Privileges or Immunities clause, its sudden death, and potential revival.
The Constitution, Slavery and Reconstruction
Slaughter-House and Civil Rights
Substantive Due Process and the Second Amendment
Privileges or Immunities and Economic Liberty
The Constitution, Slavery and Reconstruction
These sources depict the conflict between state and federal power before the Civil War, and the renewed debate during Reconstruction, as former Confederate states violated rights protected in the federal constitution by codifying the persecution of freed blacks and former Union soldiers.
Statutory Law
Freedmen's Bureau Act (1865)
Civil Rights Act of 1866
Other Sources
Congressional Debates:
John Bingham, February 11, 1859 (PDF)
John Bingham, February 28, 1866 (PDF)
Frederick Woodbridge, February 29, 1866 (PDF)
John Bingham, May 10, 1866 (PDF)
Jacob Howard, May 23, 1866 (PDF)
Lysander Spooner, The Unconstitutionality of Slavery (1845, 1860)
Joel Tiffany, Treatise on the Unconstitutionality of American Slavery (1849)
Lysander Spooner, No Treason (1867-1870)
Christopher Tiedeman, The Unwritten Constitution of the United States (1890)
Richard Aynes, "On Misreading John Bingham and the Fourteenth Amendment" (1993)
David T. Hardy, "Original Popular Understanding of the 14th Amendment as Reflected in the Print Media of 1866-68" (2009)
Slaughter-House and Civil Rights
The 1872 Slaughter-House decision effectively nullified the Privileges or Immunities clause by narrowing the definion of the federal rights it protects to a few specific privileges like access to national waterways. This stripped the clause of its vital original function, the protection of all federal rights - enumerated and unenumerated - against the states. In rendering Privileges or Immunities an "inkblot," the Slaughter-House decision opened the door for Jim Crow, and began a 100-year process of recovering lost rights that is still incomplete.
Case Law
Slaughter-House (1872)
Wysinger v. Crookshank (1890)
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896)
Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
Saenz v. Roe (1999)
Other Sources
Richard Aynes, "Constricting the Law of Freedom," a recent examination of Slaughter-House (1994)
Substantive Due Process and the Second Amendment
The doctrine of "substantive due process" has been used to replicate the function of the Privileges or Immunities clause by "incorporating" federal rights against the states through individual cases. The right to bear arms is one of the few Bill of Rights privileges still unincorporated. Heller v. District of Columbia established that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to bear arms, and the upcoming McDonald v. City of Chicago will incorporate that right against the states. However, it remains to be determined how that right will be incorporated - creating the unique opportunity to argue Privileges or Immunities back into the book.
Case Law
Presser v. Illinois (1886)
Heller v. District of Columbia (2008)
Institute for Justice Amicus Briefs for McDonald
Chicago Gun Ban Certiorari Brief
Chicago Gun Ban Merits Brief
Scholarship by IJ Attorneys
Audio: IJ Senior Attorney Clark M. Neily III debates Loyola Law School professor Kurt Lash on the Second Amendment for the Federalist Society's SCOTUScast (2009)
Clark M. Neily III and Robert J. McNamara, "Getting Beyond Guns: Context for the Coming Debate over Privileges or Immunities" (2009); condensed and reprinted by the Federalist Society here.
Clark M. Neily III, "The Right to Keep and Bear Arms in the States: Ambiguity, False Modesty, and (Maybe) Another Win for Originalism" (2009)
Other Sources
Kimberly C. Shankman & Roger Pillon, "Reviving the Privileges or Immunities Clause to Redress the Balance Among States, Individuals, and the Federal Government" (1998)
Michael Lawrence, "Second Amendment Incorporation through the Fourteenth Amendment Privileges or Immunities and Due Process Clauses" (2006)
Josh Blackman and Ilya Shapiro, "Keeping Pandora's Box Sealed: Privileges or Immunities, The Constitution in 2020, and Properly Extending the Right to Keep and Bear Arms to the States" (2009)
Privileges or Immunities and Economic Liberty
The Privileges or Immunities clause was originally designed to address government persecution of disfavored groups. The goverment oppressed these groups by depriving them of their right to bear arms and their economic liberty. That's why the Privileges or Immunities clause is a much stronger protection against the states than piecemeal "incorporation" of rights - "Privileges or Immunities" protects even unenumerated rights like economic liberty, the deprivation of which has been proven as a tool of tyrannical governments.
Federalist No. 11 describes the role of economic liberty in a free society (1787)
The Institute for Justice's economic liberty cases incorporate a strong effort to overturn Slaughter-House's incorrect interpretation of the Privileges or Immunities clause. The cases below include Privileges-or-Immunities arguments in IJ's defense of the right to earn an honest living.
Institute for Justice cases:
Florida Interior Design
Massachusetts Nautical Tours
Maryland Funeral Homes
Minnesota Hairbraiding
Mississippi Hairbraiding
Washington (state) Hairbraiding
Arizona Hairbraiding
Louisiana Florists
Oklahoma Caskets
Tennessee Caskets
Ohio Hairbraiding
California Hairbraiding
New York Vans
Washington, DC Hairbraiding
- Government Unchecked: The False Problem of “Judicial Activism” and the Need for Judicial Engagement>
- Government Unchecked>
- CJE - Judicial Engagement in Action: Texas Rice Land Partners v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Texas>
- CJE - Court Invokes 'Judicial Engagement'>
- CJE Videos and Podcasts>
- Litigating for Liberty
January 7, 2011more
- The Future of Judicial Engagement
Volokh Conspiracy
October 14, 2011more
- The Alternatives to Judicial Engagement Are Unsatisfactory
Volokh Conspiracy
Oct. 13, 2011
As discussed in my first two posts...more
- Judicial Abdication Is a Bigger Problem Than Judicial Activism
Volokh Conspiracy
Oct. 12, 2011
As I noted yesterday...more
- Why the Call for “Judicial Engagement”?
Volokh Conspiracy
Oct. 11, 2011
The Institute for Justice coined..more
- When a Law is Unconstitutional, Judicial Restraint is No Virtue
Minnesota Public Radio
August 18, 2011
The Constitution creates a system....more
- Whatever You Think of Obamacare, You Should Applaud Friday’s Ruling
August 15, 2011
National Review
Last Friday, August 12...more
- Thin Black Line Essential for Limited Government
August 12, 2011
Big Government
As the debt-ceiling debacle shows...more
- Supreme Court Tea Leaves for ObamaCare?
August 12, 2011
Big Government
Imagine America faces....more
- The Supreme Court Shows Its Independence
August 11, 2011
Daily Caller
No one needs to look far...
more
- American Judges Must Bench Their Rule-Of-Law Sapping Empathy
August 4, 2011
Forbes.com
Whenever a president nominates...more
- The Obamacare Case Proves that It’s Time for Judicial Engagement
July 12, 2011
National Review
The recent ruling by...more
- Paying Tribute To Our Nation's Constitutional Heroes
July 12, 2011
Forbes.com
At a time when the need...more
- A Child's Right to Sell Lemonade
July 1, 2011
Washington Post
A group of Maryland children recently...more
- How Penn Central Derailed Property Rights
June 27, 2011
Forbes.com
Federal regulations of unprecedented...more
- Protecting the Freedom to Speak (And To Annoy Politicians)
June 29, 2011
Arizona Capitol Times
The U.S. and Arizona Constitutions...more
- The Two-Faced Commerce Clause
June 24, 2011
Washington Times
The Obamacare lawsuits working...more
- ObamaCare Has No Place in a Limited Government
June 12, 2011
Big Government
A century ago, the idea that the Constitution imposes...more
- Civil Forfeiture Laws And The Continued Assault On Private Property
June 8, 2011
Forbes.com
Civil forfeiture laws represent one..more
- Judicial Engagement
June 4, 2011
Philadelphia Inquirer
In their quest to end so-called judicial activism.. more
- Engaged Judges Needed to Protect Vital Freedoms
May 19, 2011
Huffington Post
To those locked in the power struggles between right..more
- An Intelligible Principle To Restrain Unelected Government Officials
May 16, 2011
Forbes.com
By now it is no secret that the massive new laws regulatingmore
- Buzzing By The Constitution
April 19, 2011
Forbes.com
During a recent argument before the U.S. Supreme Court, Justice Elena Kagan sought to minimize the importance of an attorney's statement with which she disagreed by saying "some people may use certain buzz words and other people don't use those buzz wordsmore
- Government Too Big? Blame Judges Who Won’t Judge
April 18, 2011
Townhall.com
The astonishing size and scope of our federal government is no longer news to anyone who has been paying attention to the ongoing budget battles in Washington, D.Cmore
- The Lunacy Behind Overregulation Gone Wild
April 8, 2011
Tampa Tribune
The Florida House has approved HB 5005, a bill that would eliminate unnecessary state regulation of common occupations such as auctioneering, hair braiding and interior design and provide a much-needed economic boost for the Sunshine State.more
- Engaged Judges Would End Government Abuses
April 4, 2011
Daily Caller
The framers of our Constitution understood that men aren’t angels, so they created a document that was designed to limit the powers of government officials
more
- The Time For Judicial Engagement
March 22, 2011
Forbes.com
Constitutional cases are often difficult and frequently defy bright lines or simple rulesmore
- Judicial Excuses
March 17, 2011
National Review
Is it “judicial activism” to forbid the government from censoring a movie? This is not a trick question.more
- Gene Weingarten Revives America's Civic Religion
March 13, 2011
The Huffington Post
Without even seeming to try, Gene Weingarten's cover of the Bill of Rights rings closer to the tune of the original than anything you'd be able to glean from most of our nation's constitutional scholarship or political commentary.more
- Judicial Abdication, Not Activism, is the Real Problem in the Courts
February 24, 2011
Townhall.com
“Judicial activism” is a term on the lips of people across the political spectrum. more
- Judges Need to Be More Assertive in Defending Our Freedom
February 24, 2011
The Daily Caller
What is it that judges should do? “Judge” sounds like an obvious answer, but prominent jurists on both the left and right would disagreemore
- Cancer Patients vs. the Attorney General
February 14, 2011
Huffington Post
I don't meet a lot of kids in my line of work.more
- Texas Regulators Unnecessarily Impede Right to Earn a Living
February 14, 2011
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
What would you do if a government official visited you at work and, finding you had no license for your job, fined you $5,000?more
- Deferring to the Constitution
February 11, 2011
Townhall.com
Why does the Constitution place restrictions on Congress? more
- Health-Care Reform and the Courts
February 9, 2011
Washington Post
The Constitution was designed to prevent the kind of runaway government we have today. more
- Health Care Mandates and the Emptiness of "Judicial Activism"
February 1, 2011
Huffington Post
Federal District Judge Roger Vinson Monday issued an opinion striking down, in its entirety, the Obama administration's health care reform act.more
- The Case for Engaged Justices
December 5, 2010
Washington Post
Debates about judicial review concern the propriety and scope of judicial supervision of....more
- The Outrage is Judicial Abdication, not Activism
August 31, 2010
MakeNoLaw.org
In a recent speech Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio unwittingly illustrated the folly of attacks on “judicial activism” by the left and the right. more
- When Judges Judge, It Is Not Activism
December 17, 2009
The Corner at NRO.com
There has been spirited debate in the Corner between Anthony Dick and Ramesh Ponnuru over a federal lawsuit that the Institute for Justice (IJ) recently filed challenging....more
- IJ’s Bone Marrow Case: Judical Engagement, Not Activism
November 5, 2009
Volokh Conspiracy
Today I’d like to discuss how to apply principled judicial engagement to the bone marrow case..more
- Judicial 'Activism' Isn't the Issue
June 6, 2009
Wall Street Journal
Liberals and conservatives both show too much deference to Congress....more










