Popular Sovereignty.
-ssm466
the issue of slavery in the territories was to be decided through governmental bodies
It said were slavery was allowed in territories.
- A major difference in the Constitution of the confederacy was that it allowed slavery in the new territories.
The notion that people should be able to vote on the matter of slavery in the territories was called popular sovereignty. Popular sovereignty is a doctrine rooted in the belief that every human being is sovereign.
Territories
The doctrine you are referring to is popular sovereignty. This idea, championed by Senator Stephen Douglas in the mid-19th century, proposed that residents of a territory should be able to determine whether slavery would be permitted in that territory through a vote or legislative action. This doctrine played a significant role in the lead-up to the American Civil War.
the issue of slavery in the territories was to be decided through governmental bodies
It is the principle of Higher Law.
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 allowed popular sovereignty to decide the issue of slavery in Kansas, leading to violence and bloodshed as pro- and anti-slavery settlers clashed. This further polarized the North and South and worsened sectional divisions that eventually led to the American Civil War.
Stephen Douglas - Apex
The Kansas-Nebraska Act allowed the territories of Kansas and Nebraska to decide the issue of slavery by popular sovereignty. The people who lived in these territories would be able to vote on whether slavery would be allowed there. What effect did this have on Kansas?
Senator William Seward's doctrine, known as the "Higher Law" doctrine, argued that slavery should be excluded from the territories because it violated a moral law that was higher than the Constitution. He believed that moral principles were more important than legal statutes and that slavery could not be justified under any circumstances.
David Wilmot
It said were slavery was allowed in territories.
David Wilmot, a Democratic congressman from Pennsylvania, proposed the Wilmot Proviso in 1846, which sought to ban slavery in the territories acquired from Mexico as a result of the Mexican-American War. The proviso was never passed into law but fueled tensions over the expansion of slavery in the United States.
Stephen Douglas' Freeport Doctrine referred to the proposal that territories had the right to refuse slavery if they chose. This was against a Supreme Court decision. The doctrine was espoused in his debates with Abraham Lincoln in 1858.
The individual territories can choose to abolish slavery in that territory if they descide they wish to do so. Evie