fugitive$30299$ - traduzione in greco
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fugitive$30299$ - traduzione in greco

LAWS PASSED BY THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS IN 1793 AND 1850
Fugitive slave law; Fugitive slave act; Fugitive Slave Act; Fugitive Slave Law; Fugitive Slave Acts; Fugitive Slave Laws; Fugitive Slave Bill; The Fugitive Slave Act; Fugitive slave laws
  • ''A Ride for Liberty—The Fugitive Slaves'' (c. 1862) by Eastman Johnson [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • Rufus King's failed resolution to re-implement the slavery prohibition in the Ordinance of 1784.
  • Massachusetts had abolished slavery in 1783, but the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 required government officials to assist slavecatchers in capturing fugitives within the state.
  • Enslavement in the 13 colonies, 1770. Numbers show actual and estimated slave population by colony. Colors show the slave population as a percentage of each colony's total population. Boundaries shown are based on 1860 state boundaries, not those of 1770 colonies.<ref>New York and New Hampshire claimed what was to become Vermont. Kentucky was a county of Virginia. Tennessee was a county of North Carolina. Even less neatly, delegates attended the colonial Virginia House of Burgesses from north of the Ohio River in what would later be Ohio and Illinois.</ref>

fugitive      
adj. φυγόδικος

Definizione

fugitive from justice
n. a person convicted or accused of a crime who hides from law enforcement in the state or flees across state lines to avoid arrest or punishment. Under Article IV, Section 2 of the U.S. Constitution, Governors are required to "deliver up" and return any fugitives from justice to the state where they allegedly committed the crime, a process called extradition. See also: extradition

Wikipedia

Fugitive slave laws in the United States

The fugitive slave laws were laws passed by the United States Congress in 1793 and 1850 to provide for the return of enslaved people who escaped from one state into another state or territory. The idea of the fugitive slave law was derived from the Fugitive Slave Clause which is in the United States Constitution (Article IV, Section 2, Paragraph 3). It was thought that forcing states to deliver fugitive slaves back to enslavement violated states' rights due to state sovereignty and was believed that seizing state property should not be left up to the states. The Fugitive Slave Clause states that fugitive slaves "shall be delivered up on Claim of the Party to whom such Service or Labour may be due", which abridged state rights because forcing people back into slavery was a form of retrieving private property. The Compromise of 1850 entailed a series of laws that allowed slavery in the new territories and forced officials in free states to give a hearing to slave-owners without a jury.