Rezultati pretraživanja
  1. Hooray! 🎉🎉🎉 Congratulations to and co-author Alejandro de la Fuente on ! 📙 , have you checked it out yet? It is the #1 new release in legal history on Amazon. 😊💯👍

  2. 29. pro 2019.

    We did an interview with magazine about our new book

  3. 3. velj

    LA peeps, I’ll be at ⁦⁩ in Hancock Park on Thursday 2/13 pm discussing with the brilliant Brenda Stevenson - please come and tell your friends!

  4. 3. velj

    When full-scale emancipation was not yet in the cards, enslaved people in Virginia, Louisiana, and Cuba used whatever legal tools they could find among relevant traditions to earn freedom and resist inequality.

  5. 2. velj

    and Alejandro de la Fuente gave a terrific talk . Congrats to you both! – mjesto: Politics and Prose

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  6. 29. sij

    Mark your calendars, ! 🖋️📆 and co-author Alejandro de la Fuente will be discussing Bookstore on Sunday, 2/2. More info ⤵️📘⤵️

  7. 29. sij

    DC peeps, please join me and Alejandro de la Fuente this Sunday at ⁦⁩ Bookstore Union Market talking about with ⁦⁩ at 1 pm (a little history before your football) ⁦

  8. 21. sij
  9. 16. sij
  10. 5. sij
  11. 30. pro 2019.

    by & Alejandro de la Fuente in magazine. We will have copies at () at the booth later this week.

  12. 8. pro 2019.

    Just one of the treasures that awaited me at my new job at . by and Alejandro de la Fuente.

  13. 14. kol 2019.
    Odgovor korisnicima

    17th C Va anomalous in NOT having the legal framework or customary practices for hereditary slavery already - as many other colonies did. That’s why such a shift from 17th to 18th C as describes. Cuba and Louisiana were ready from day 1.

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