IV. Academic Legal Memorandum (More Scholarly / More Precise)

(1866 directory)

Title:
The Citizenship Clause as Remedial Law: Original Meaning, Jurisdiction, and the Limits of Administrative Custom

Abstract

This memorandum argues that the modern doctrine of universal birthright citizenship rests on administrative custom rather than constitutional text, history, or structure. Properly understood, the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause is remedial, jurisdictional, and historically bounded.

I. Textual Analysis

The phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” was intended to exclude persons who owed no complete political allegiance to the United States. Contemporary congressional debates confirm that jurisdiction meant full, political jurisdiction, not mere territorial presence.

II. Historical Context

The Citizenship Clause was enacted to constitutionalize the Civil Rights Act of 1866 and to secure the status of freed slaves. It was not designed as a general immigration policy, nor as an open-ended grant of citizenship untethered from allegiance.

III. Structural Considerations

Allowing administrative custom to redefine citizenship undermines Article I authority over naturalization and disrupts the Reconstruction settlement by reallocating constitutional remedies away from their intended beneficiaries.

IV. Enforcement Failure

Non-enforcement of Section 2 of the 1866 Act has permitted precisely the abuses Congress sought to prevent: deprivation of rights through informal practice and local resistance.

V. Conclusion

Reasserting the original meaning of the Citizenship Clause restores constitutional coherence, respects historical limits, and preserves the Union’s post-Civil War foundation.

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