Required Resources In your American History course, you will utilize scholarly s

Required Resources
In your American History course, you will utilize scholarly sources to address questions in the weekly assignments. Please be advised that History.com, Wiki, Wikipedia, or websites such as cliffnotes.com, studymode.com, coursehero.com, and the like are not deemed scholarly sources. Therefore, use your course text and incorporate an additional scholarly source from the Chamberlain Library in your response.
Below is a list of resources you must choose from:
Textbook: Chapters 12, 14
Lesson
Minimum of 1 scholarly source from the Chamberlain Library resources below:
Sources for the Week 4 Discussion are available by accessing this link.Links to an external site.
The “Popular Data Bases” within the Library Guide for scholarly sources and videos via Search Popular History DatabasesLinks to an external site. or the History Library GuideLinks to an external site..
Initial Post Instructions
In preparation for the initial post, consider two (2) of the leading causes of the American Civil War: 
The Compromise of 1850 
The Fugitive Slave Law of 1850 
Uncle Tom’s Cabin 1852 
The Kansas-Nebraska Act of 1854 
The Dred Scott Case of 1857 
The Lincoln Douglas Debates 1858 
Then, in one (1) to two (2) paragraphs, address one (1) of the following:  
Based on the historical facts given your two (2) selections above, assess if the American Civil War was inevitable. 
Analyze if the United States Supreme Court can settle legal and moral issues through judiciary review. In your response, provide a documented example of a modern parallel of a legal or moral issue settled by the United States Supreme Court. 
Teacher wants pages numbers for any citation.
Textbook:
Title: U.S. History
Authors: P. Scott Corbett, Volker Janssen, John M. Lund, Todd Pfannestiel, Sylvie Waskiewicz, & Paul Vickery
Publisher: OpenStax
Publication Date: 2023
APA Citation
Corbett, P. S., Janssen, V., Lund, J. M., Pfannestiel, T., Vickery, P., & Waskiewicz, S. (2023, July 6). U.S. History. OpenStax, OER Commons. Retrieved January 2, 2024, from https://openstax.org/details/books/us-history
U.S. History by OpenStax is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License,
except where otherwise noted.