Search for: "Allison Anna Tait" Results 41 - 47 of 47
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28 Oct 2015, 4:00 am by Gerry W. Beyer
Allison Anna Tait (Professor, University of Richmond - School of Law) recently published an article entitled, The Secret Economy of Charitable Giving, Boston University Law Review, Vol. 95, 2015. [read post]
22 Jul 2012, 9:04 pm by Hastings Law Journal
Williams The Law of Gender Stereotyping and the Work-Family Conflicts of Men Stephanie Bornstein A Tale of Three Families: Historical Households, Earned Belonging, and Natural Connections Allison Anna Tait Notes Repercussions of China’s High-Tech Rise: Protection and Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights in China Emily Gische Escaping Forced Gang Recruitment: Establishing Eligibility for Asylum After Matter of S-E-G- Alexandra Grayner Hastings Law Journal Voir… [read post]
23 May 2012, 7:23 pm by Family Law
Allison Anna Tait (Gender Equity and Policy Postdoctoral Associate, Yale Women Faculty Forum) has posted A Tale of Three Families: Historical Households, Earned Belonging, and Natural Connections, 63 Hastings Law Journal (2012), on SSRN. [read post]
17 Apr 2012, 11:14 am
Allison Anna Tait, Yale Law School, has published Unhappy Marriages and Unpaid Creditors: Chancery’s Enforcement of a Wife’s Right to Property within Marriage in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century England. [read post]
16 Apr 2012, 9:30 pm by Alfred Brophy
 Allison Anna Tait's article, "Unhappy Marriages and Unpaid Creditors: Chancery’s Enforcement of a Wife’s Right to Property Within Marriage in Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century England," deals with a topic of much interest to me of late: how did families protect women's rights to property before the Married Women's Property Acts of the antebellum era. [read post]
28 Jun 2011, 11:48 am by Sean Patrick Donlan
CONTENTS Editorial Introduction: Law and Literature, Christian Biet and Lissa Lincoln MAPPING THE QUESTION Crossing the BordersLaw & Literature (as an epistemological break in legal theory), Gilles Lhuilier Narrative and the Origins of Law, Allison Tait and Luke Norris Before the Temple of Justice: Reading Roman Law Reading, Leif Dahlberg Theory and Post-Theories Law and (which?) [read post]
24 Jun 2011, 10:05 am
The June issue of Law and Humanities contains:Paul Raffield and Gary Watt, EditorialChristian Biet and Lissa Lincoln, Introduction: Law and LiteratureGilles Lhuilier, Law & Literature (as an epistemological break in legal theory)Allison Tait and Luke Norris, Narrative and the Origins of LawLeif Dahlbert, Before the Temple of Justice: Reading Roman Law ReadingKlaus Stierstorfer, Klaus, Law and (which?) [read post]