Search for: "Lawrence Friedman" Results 261 - 280 of 514
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7 Oct 2009, 6:20 pm
A History of American Law by Lawrence M. [read post]
12 May 2010, 6:47 am by pfriedman
As dean of Harvard Law School from 2003 to 2009, she was instrumental in beefing up the school’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society by recruiting Lawrence Lessig and others who take a strongly liberal position on ‘fair use’ in copyright disputes. [read post]
14 Sep 2008, 7:31 pm
Nelson, Nelson & Nelson, Belleville (Collinsville program)Bradford Peterson, Urbana (Collinsville program)Lawrence Scordino, Chicago (Chicago program)Kristen Wadiak, Beatty and Motil, Glen Carbon (Collinsville program)Kenneth Werts, Craig & Craig, Mt. [read post]
24 May 2019, 3:01 am by Walter Olson
But they’re quite good at dressing up their resentments as progressive [Daniel Friedman, Quillette] “Does Yale Law School’s Antidiscrimination Policy on Subsidies for Student Employment Discriminate on the Basis of Religion? [read post]
21 Dec 2021, 12:45 pm by Bonnie Shucha
Authors include Lawrence Friedman, William Clune, Malcolm Feeley, Dirk Hartog, and Michael Scott. [read post]
30 Jun 2009, 9:55 am
  For those trade lawyers who want to check out twitter for the first time, I recommend the following as a good starting point: John Boscariol of McCarthy Tetrault, twittering as tradelawyer Lawrence Friedman of Barnes Richardson, twittering as customslawblog Martha Harrison of Heenan Blaikie, twittering as intltradelawyer Doug Jacobson of Sandler, Travis and Rosenberg, twittering as tradelawnews And Inside U.S. trade, twittering as insidetrade (Apologies if I missed… [read post]
20 Jul 2012, 11:12 am
Louis University School of Law in honor of Lawrence Friedman. [read post]
25 Nov 2020, 10:42 am by Bonnie Shucha
In one of two introductory essays appearing in “Selected Works,” University of Minnesota Law Professor Brian Bix writes, “Macaulay has taught contract law scholars many things: to focus on practice not theory, on relationships not models, and on the power and politics behind everything,” Elizabeth Mertz, a University of Wisconsin law professor, co-wrote a second essay with Stanford University’s Lawrence Friedman, “Law in Reality, Law in Context:… [read post]
5 Mar 2012, 3:00 am by Tomiko Brown-Nagin
The initial idea, which dates back to the mid 1990s, was a book of approximately the same length and scope of Lawrence Friedman's A History of American Law. [read post]
1 Jun 2017, 9:45 am by Barbara Moreno
LAW AND SOCIETY Friedman, Lawrence M., Impact: How Law Affects Behavior (2016). [read post]
6 Jul 2012, 9:30 am by Dan Ernst
Louis University School of Law in honor of Lawrence Friedman. [read post]
8 Mar 2012, 5:48 am by Alfred Brophy
 Tomiko and Fred have a number of observations about White's methodology (in particular his contrast with Lawrence Friedman's law and society approach and Tomiko is particularly interested in Native American ideas about law and their contact with European Americans and also the role of the law in the development of capitalism) and John asks some meta questions about why we do legal history (and he hypothesizes what White might be doing here). [read post]
7 Jun 2012, 12:25 am by Lawrence Solum
Here is the abstract: In his influential History of American Law, Lawrence Friedman suggests that tort law was “totally insignificant” prior to the late Nineteenth Century. [read post]
9 Mar 2012, 4:20 am by Matthew L.M. Fletcher
Tomiko and Fred have a number of observations about White’s methodology (in particular his contrast with Lawrence Friedman’s law and society approach and Tomiko is particularly interested in Native American ideas about law and their contact with European Americans and also the role of the law in the development of capitalism) and John asks some meta questions about why we do legal history (and he hypothesizes what White might be doing here). [read post]
28 Jun 2024, 3:30 pm by Tom Smith
I personally pay zero attention to Lawrence Tribe’s legal opinions, the same way I couldn’t care less what Thomas Friedman or David Ignatius or any newspaper or magazine editor in American has to say about foreign policy or any other subject—because no one does, because they’re all so obviously in the tank. [read post]