New Books in Political Science

Mark Peterson, "The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution: A Thousand-Year History" (Princeton UP, 2026)

May 9, 2026
Mark Peterson, Edmund S. Morgan Professor of History at Yale and expert on early American institutions, traces a thousand-year constitutional arc from medieval land systems to modern crisis. He explores land and population as drivers of constitutional change. He examines expansion, slavery, Reconstruction, industrialization, and why amendment is so difficult. He calls for built-in renovation and stronger local representation.
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INSIGHT

Constitution As Relationship Not Just Text

  • Constitutions are relationships between people, land, government, and written texts rather than just texts themselves.
  • Mark Peterson traces this back to the Domesday Book which recorded land, revenue, and social structure that underwrote governance in medieval England.
INSIGHT

Domesday Book As A Constitutional Template

  • The Domesday Book functioned as a constitutional document by mapping land, owners, productivity, and revenue for governance.
  • Peterson argues colonists imported these English land-centric institutions to North America, shaping later constitutional aims.
INSIGHT

Founding As Process And Realignment

  • Founding should be seen as a process: states first rewrote charters and created the Articles before the Philadelphia Constitution.
  • The Constitution in 1787 was a realignment to give national power needed to manage western lands and expansion.
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