Rebec­ca J. Scott is the Charles Gib­son Dis­tin­guished Uni­ver­si­ty Pro­fes­sor of His­to­ry and Pro­fes­sor of Law at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Michi­gan. At the Law School, she teach­es a course on civ­il rights and the bound­aries of cit­i­zen­ship in his­tor­i­cal per­spec­tive, as well as a sem­i­nar on the law in slav­ery and freedom.

Her most recent book, co-authored with Jean M. Hébrard, is Freedom Papers: An Atlantic Odyssey in the Age of Emancipation (Harvard University Press, 2012). It traces one family’s interaction with law and official documents across five generations, from West Africa to the Americas to Europe. Freedom Papers received the 2012 Albert Beveridge Book Award in American History and the James Rawley Book Prize in Atlantic History, both from the American Historical Association.

Among Scott’s recent articles are the co-authored “María Coleta and the Capuchin Friar: Slavery, Salvation, and the Adjudication of Status,” with Carlos Venegas, William and Mary Quarterly (October 2019); “How Does the Law Put a Historical Analogy to Work?: Defining the Imposition of ‘A Condition Analogous to that of a Slave’ in Modern Brazil,” with L. A. de Andrade Barbosa and C. H. Haddad, Duke Journal of Constitutional Law & Public Policy 13 (2017); “Social Facts, Legal Fictions, and the Attribution of Slave Status: The Puzzle of Prescription,” Law and History Review (2017); and “Public Rights, Social Equality, and the Conceptual Roots of the Plessy Challenge,” Michigan Law Review (2008).

She is the recipient of a MacArthur Prize Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is past president of the American Society for Legal History (2015–2017).