
"Childers significantly advances our understanding of how inter- and intrasectional debates about popular sovereignty shaped southern politics throughout the conflict over slavery's expansion."--Civil War History
"As Christopher Childers demonstrates in this thorough and thoughtful book, both popular sovereignty and controversy over its meaning are as old as the nation itself."--H-Net Reviews
"[A] thorough, nuanced, comprehensive, fair-minded, and original study."--American Political Thought
"A thoughtful and well-researched book. Childers has plainly unpacked the history of popular sovereignty and the territorial crisis more thoroughly than any previous writer."--Civil War Book Review
"By analyzing the evolution of southerners' attitudes toward popular sovereignty from the 1770s to the Civil War, Childers has found much that is fresh and important to say about this venerable topic. A most welcome contribution indeed."--Michael Holt, author of The Fate of Their Country
"A thoughtful volume that brings fresh and keen insight to the role played by the doctrine of popular sovereignty in the unraveling of the American Union."--Lacy Ford, author of Deliver Us from Evil: The Slavery Question in the Old South
"A well-written, well-organized, and close study of the multiple and conflicted meanings of popular sovereignty."--Michael A. Morrison, author of Slavery and the American West