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First American anti-slavery society organized
JURISTbot
April 14, 2010 04:00:00 am

On April 14, 1775, Benjamin Franklin and Benjamin Rush of Philadelphia helped organize the first American society for the abolition of slavery.

Learn more about the Pennsylvania Abolition Society.

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SCOTUS dispatch: justices grapple with nationwide injunctions blocking Trump’s birthright citizenship order

SCOTUS dispatch: justices grapple with nationwide injunctions blocking Trump’s birthright citizenship order

Ghana dispatch: Supreme Court upholds suspension of the Chief Justice

Ghana dispatch: Supreme Court upholds suspension of the Chief Justice

Latest COMMENTARY
Exclusion Is Not Solidarity: Tilburg’s Boycott Hurts Students, Not States

Exclusion Is Not Solidarity: Tilburg’s Boycott Hurts Students, Not States

by Liran Bean | Tilburg University and Sharon Basch | University of Pittsburgh School of Law
An Opportunity for Justice: The New Aggression Tribunal for Ukraine

An Opportunity for Justice: The New Aggression Tribunal for Ukraine

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
Latest FEATURES
Explainer: US Supreme Court to Hear Arguments on Trump’s Challenge to Birthright Citizenship

Explainer: US Supreme Court to Hear Arguments on Trump’s Challenge to Birthright Citizenship

Voices of Afghanistan Interview Series: ‘We, the female doctors—once symbols of women’s progress, ability, and independence—are now facing barriers, threats, and silence’

Voices of Afghanistan Interview Series: ‘We, the female doctors—once symbols of women’s progress, ability, and independence—are now facing barriers, threats, and silence’

THIS DAY @ LAW

US and Japan sign Kanagwa Treaty

On March 31, 1854, US Commodore Matthew Perry and representatives of the Japanese government signed the Convention of Kanagawa. The terms of the treaty marked the end of Japan's 500 years of self-imposed isolation by opening the Ports of Shimoda and Hakodate. Four years later, Japanese-American relations were further expanded by the Treaty of Amity and Commerce (Harris Treaty), which opened more Japanese ports to US trade and set up a system of extraterritoriality for Americans in Japan.

Spanish royal decree ordered expulsion of Jews

On March 31, 1492, King Ferdinand of Spain signed a decree expelling Jews from his kingdom. Read a contemporary account of the expulsion, originally written in Hebrew by an Italian Jew in 1495.

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