Thomas W. Mitchell

Last updated
Thomas W. Mitchell
Thomas W. Mitchell (49469465803).jpg
Mitchell in 2020
NationalityAmerican
Alma mater
Awards MacArthur Fellow
Scientific career
FieldsLegal studies
Institutions

Thomas Wilson Mitchell is an American law professor. He is a professor at Boston College Law School. His work focuses on property law, particularly the legal doctrines that have caused Black Americans to lose millions of acres of land since the early 1900s. Mitchell was a 2020 MacArthur Fellow. Recently, he founded and became Director of the Initiative on Land, Housing & Property Rights alongside his wife, Professor Lisa T. Alexander, at Boston College Law School.

Contents

Education and positions

Mitchell attended Amherst College, where he graduated with a B.A. degree in English in 1987. [1] He then attended the Howard University School of Law, obtaining his J.D. degree in 1993. [1] In 1999 he received an LLM degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School, where he was William H. Hastie Fellow. [1]

In 2000, Mitchell joined the faculty at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where he became Professor of Law and Frederick W. and Vi Miller Chair in Law. [1] In 2016, he joined the law faculty at Texas A&M University, with a joint appointment as a professor in the Department of Agricultural Economics. [1] In 2022, he joined Boston College Law School as the Robert J. Drinan, S.J. Endowed Chair. [2] Mitchell is also the Director of the Initiative on Land, Housing & Property Rights which seeks to help disadvantaged people and communities acquire and secure important property rights. [2]

Research

Mitchell's research has focused on the legal causes of loss of land by Black Americans. [3] He has shown that between the Civil War and the year 1910 Black Americans came to possess about 15 million acres of land in the south, but by the end of the 20th century that number had shrunk to only about 2 million acres. [4] Mitchell has studied the legal processes by which this loss occurred, particularly that laws that govern inheritance in cases where an owner does not leave a will and there are multiple heirs. These doctrines have, over time, caused large amounts of land to leave the heirs of Black property owners through mechanisms like forced partition sales. [3] This type of legal dispossession of land can be viewed as a vestige of Jim Crow laws. [5] Mitchell has argued that forced sale conditions lower the expected value of a sale, and minority land owners are more likely to be placed in a force sale situation rather than voluntarily choosing to sell land; consequently, this inheritance law systematically lowers their wealth over time. [6] This is an example of legal empiricism, which Mitchell has argued is an important methodology for understanding the causes of land loss. [7]

Mitchell was the principal drafter of a law, called the Partition of Heirs Property Act, which aimed to give the descendants of heirs a better chance of retaining property that they wish to retain. [8] By October 2020, the Partition of Heirs Property Act had been adopted in 18 states. [3]

In 2020, Mitchell was named a MacArthur Fellow. [8]

As a part of his current employment at the Boston College Law School (2022), he has designated time to further research into Heirs Property and the issues surrounding those that are effected. Thomas Mitchell continues his research and legislative work nationwide to bring justice to disadvantaged communities.

Selected works

Selected awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frederic William Maitland</span> English legal historian (1850–1906)

Frederic William Maitland was an English historian and jurist who is regarded as the modern father of English legal history. From 1884 until his death in 1906, he was reader in English law, then Downing Professor of the Laws of England at the University of Cambridge.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samuel Williston</span> American lawyer

Samuel Williston was an American lawyer and law professor who authored an influential treatise on contracts.

Boston College Law School is the law school of Boston College, a private Jesuit research university in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts. It is situated on a 40-acre (160,000 m2) campus in Newton, Massachusetts, about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from the university's main campus in Chestnut Hill.

New England Law | Boston is a private law school in Boston, Massachusetts. It was founded as Portia School of Law in 1908 and is located in downtown Boston near the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.

Blackacre, Whiteacre, Greenacre, Brownacre, and variations are the placeholder names used for fictitious estates in land.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William Mitchell College of Law</span> Private law school in St. Paul, Minnesota

William Mitchell College of Law was a private, independent law school located in St. Paul, Minnesota, United States, from 1956 to 2015. Accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA), it offered full- and part-time legal education in pursuit of the Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree. On December 9, 2015, Hamline University School of Law merged into William Mitchell College of Law, and became the Mitchell Hamline School of Law.

A partition is a term used in the law of real property to describe an act, by a court order or otherwise, to divide up a concurrent estate into separate portions representing the proportionate interests of the owners of property. It is sometimes described as a forced sale. Under the common law, any owner of property who owns an undivided concurrent interest in land can seek such a division. In some cases, the parties agree to a specific division of the land; if they are unable to do so, the court will determine an appropriate division. A sole owner, or several owners, of a piece of land may partition their land by entering a deed poll.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard T. Ely</span> American economist (1854–1943)

Richard Theodore Ely was an American economist, author, and leader of the Progressive movement who called for more government intervention to reform what they perceived as the injustices of capitalism, especially regarding factory conditions, compulsory education, child labor, and labor unions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vanderbilt University Law School</span> Graduate school in Nashville, Tennessee, US

Vanderbilt University Law School is a graduate school of Vanderbilt University. Established in 1874, it is one of the oldest law schools in the southern United States. Vanderbilt Law enrolls approximately 640 students, with each entering Juris Doctor class consisting of approximately 175 students.

The Northeastern University School of Law (NUSL) is the law school of Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marquette University Law School</span>

Marquette University Law School is the law school of Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is one of two law schools in Wisconsin and the only private law school in the state. Founded in 1892 as the Milwaukee Law Class, MULS is housed in Eckstein Hall on Marquette University's campus in downtown Milwaukee.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Saint John's Seminary (Massachusetts)</span>

Saint John's Seminary, located in the Brighton neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts, is a Catholic major seminary sponsored by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston. The current rector is Fr. Stephen E. Salocks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William & Mary Law School</span> Public law school in Williamsburg, Virginia, US

William & Mary Law School, formally the Marshall-Wythe School of Law, is the law school of the College of William & Mary, a public research university in Williamsburg, Virginia. It is the oldest extant law school in the United States, having been founded in 1779 at the urging of alumnus Thomas Jefferson. As of 2023, it has an enrollment of 606 full-time students seeking a Juris Doctor (J.D.) or a Master of Laws (LL.M.) in the American Legal System, a two or three semester program for lawyers trained outside the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Annette Gordon-Reed</span> American historian

Annette Gordon-Reed is an American historian and law professor. She is currently the Carl M. Loeb University Professor at Harvard University and a professor of history in the university's Faculty of Arts & Sciences. She is formerly the Charles Warren Professor of American Legal History at Harvard University and the Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Gordon-Reed is noted for changing scholarship on Thomas Jefferson regarding his relationship with Sally Hemings and her children.

Kevin Jerome Greene is an American lawyer and professor of contract music law and entertainment law at Southwestern Law School in Los Angeles, California. Professor Greene was among the first legal scholars to examine the treatment of African-American art forms, such as the blues, under intellectual property law.

Robin Fleming is a medieval historian and a professor of history at Boston College. She is the president of the Medieval Academy of America and a 2013 MacArthur Fellow. She has written several books focusing on the people of Roman Britain and early medieval Britain, using both archaeological evidence and written records.

Heirs property, or heirs' property, refers to a family home or land that passes from generation to generation through inheritance, usually without a will or formal estate strategy. This unstable form of ownership limits a family’s ability to build generational wealth and hampers the efforts of nonprofits and cities to revitalize neighborhoods.

Mitchell Hamline School of Law is a private law school in Saint Paul, Minnesota. It is accredited by the American Bar Association (ABA) and offers full and part-time legal education for its Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Thomas W. Mitchell". Texas A&M University. 2020. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  2. 1 2 "Thomas W. Mitchell". Boston College. 2022. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
  3. 1 2 3 Brey, Jared (October 27, 2020). "Thomas W. Mitchell, MacArthur "Genius" Grantee, on Black Land Ownership". Next City. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  4. Mitchell, Thomas W. (January 29, 2010). "From Reconstruction to Deconstruction: Undermining Black Ownership, Political Independence, and Community Through Partition Sales of Tenancy in Common Property". Northwestern University Law Review. 95: 505.
  5. Abdullah, Galilee (October 6, 2020). "Fort-Worth Based Property Law Scholar Thomas Wilson Mitchell Wins 2020 MacArthur 'Genius' Grant". KERA News. Retrieved 28 October 2020.
  6. Thomas W. Mitchell; Stephen Malpezzi; Richard K. Green (2009). "Forced Sale Risk: Class, Race, and the Double Discount". Florida State University Law Review.
  7. Mitchell, Thomas W. (2005). "Destabilizing the normalization of rural black land loss: a critical role for legal empiricism". Wisconsin Law Review.
  8. 1 2 "Thomas Wilson Mitchell". MacArthur Fellows Program. 2020. Retrieved 28 October 2020.