Search for: "Lawrence Friedman" Results 21 - 40 of 514
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8 Dec 2015, 8:44 am by CrimProf BlogEditor
Lawrence Friedman (New England Law | Boston) has posted Commonwealth v. [read post]
15 Apr 2015, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
New from the University Press of Kansas is The Big Trial: Law as Public Spectacle, by Lawrence M. [read post]
25 Mar 2008, 10:18 pm
Lawrence Friedman (New England School of Law) has posted Reactive and Incompletely Theorized State Constitutional Decision-Making (Mississippi Law Journal, Vol. 77, No. 1, 2007) on SSRN. [read post]
4 Jun 2013, 5:00 am by Karen Tani
Congratulations to Lawrence Friedman (Stanford University)! [read post]
30 Sep 2011, 5:42 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Answer from Lawrence: The question about the difference between teaching a legal history survey in a law school as compared to teaching it in a history department is a very good question. [read post]
23 Sep 2011, 5:33 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Note to readers: This is a part of a series of questions and answers with Lawrence Friedman. [read post]
25 Aug 2011, 5:28 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Joanna Grossman and Lawrence Friedman show how vast, oceanic changes in society have reshaped and reconstituted the American family. [read post]
27 Sep 2011, 10:46 am by Mary L. Dudziak
Note to readers: This is a part of a series of questions and answers with Lawrence Friedman. [read post]
19 Apr 2011, 7:42 pm by Lawrence Solum
Lawrence Friedman (New England School of Law) has posted Path Dependence and the External Constraints on Independent State Constitutionalism (Penn State Law Review, Vol. 115, No. 4, 2011) on SSRN. [read post]
24 Aug 2011, 4:27 am by Lawrence Solum
Joanna Grossman and Lawrence Friedman show how vast, oceanic changes in society have reshaped and reconstituted the American family. [read post]
7 Oct 2013, 1:50 pm by Sean Patrick Donlan
Lawrence Friedman, ‘Introduction’ to Friedman (ed) Law and the Modern Condition: Literary and Historical Perspectives (2013) Using fiction as a lens through which to view particular developments in the law, each of the essays in the new book, 'Law and the Modern Condition: Literary and Historical Perspectives' (Talbot Publishing, 2013), discusses a work of literary fiction — some classical (the tale of Ruth in the Bible, the fiction of Franz Kafka… [read post]