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Petty Justice

Paul Craven

Low Law and the Sessions System in Charlotte County, New Brunswick, 1785-1867

Barcode 9781442649910
Hardback

Original price £94.39 - Original price £94.39
Original price
£94.39
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Release Date: 16/10/2014

Genre: History
Sub-Genre: History of the Americas
Label: University of Toronto Press
Series: Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History
Language: English
Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Low Law and the Sessions System in Charlotte County, New Brunswick, 1785-1867
Petty Justice examines the role of justices of the peace and other front-line low law officials like customs officers and deputy land surveyors in colonial local government.

Until the late nineteenth-century, the most common form of local government in rural England and the British Empire was administration by amateur justices of the peace: the sessions system. Petty Justice uses an unusually well-documented example of the colonial sessions system in Loyalist New Brunswick to examine the role of justices of the peace and other front-line low law officials like customs officers and deputy land surveyors in colonial local government.

Using the rich archival resources of Charlotte County, Paul Craven discusses issues such as the impact of commercial rivalries on local administration, the role of low law officials in resolving civil and criminal disputes and keeping the peace, their management of public works, social welfare, and liquor regulation, and the efforts of grand juries, high court judges, colonial governors, and elected governments to supervise them. A concluding chapter explains the demise of the sessions system in Charlotte County in the decade of Confederation.