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10 Sep 2013, 8:57 pm
(Pix (c) Larry Catá Backer 2013) I have been posting about the development of a new course I have been developing for our first year law school students, "Elements of Law." [read post]
4 Sep 2013, 5:34 pm by INFORRM
High-profile litigants include Prince Charles, Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones, Naomi Campbell, J.K. [read post]
4 Sep 2013, 4:30 am by Karen Tani
Cook Global Law Professor, University of Michigan“Maitland and Austin: Legal Philosophy and Legal History in Nineteenth-Century England”OCTOBER 15. [read post]
30 Aug 2013, 10:43 am by Dan Ernst
Changes in directed verdict were part of a larger program of jury reform beginning in the mid-nineteenth century in England, the states, and the federal government. [read post]
25 Aug 2013, 6:22 am by Gritsforbreakfast
Soon after Parliament beheaded King Charles in 1649, it proved itself just as tyrannical as the monarch, and jailed the opposition. [read post]
12 Aug 2013, 2:09 am by rhapsodyinbooks
An even pricklier “ally” was the imperious Charles De Gaulle, who managed to provoke the enmity of every non-Frenchman with whom he dealt. [read post]
7 Aug 2013, 10:02 am
  The Royal Collection Trust, shops on Prince Charles’s Highgrove estate and the Middletons, through their business, are selling royal baby-related goods. [read post]
7 Aug 2013, 1:34 am by Patrick S. O'Donnell
“It is philosophers who have the task of exploring what matters to us most—what is freedom? [read post]
6 Aug 2013, 7:36 am by Patrick S. O'Donnell
London: Pluto Press (published in association with the American Friends Service Committee, New England Regional Office), 2007. [read post]
5 Aug 2013, 6:34 am
You'd think the hardcore fans of Charles Darwin would be more evolved. [read post]
21 Jun 2013, 4:20 am by Sean Patrick Donlan
The studies of this volume cover most of Europe from England, Italy and Spain to Sweden, Russia and England, and both the South and North American continents. [read post]
18 Jun 2013, 7:00 am by Dan Ernst
In case you missed the story in yesterday's New York Times:A pocket-size 14th-century handwritten copy of Magna Carta, the first book on the legal rights of women published in England, letters from the 18th-century jurist William Blackstone and papers belonging to a real-life London lawyer praised by Charles Dickens’s fictional yes-man Uriah Heep are among the highlights of a rich trove of rare legal books and manuscripts just acquired by Yale University. [read post]
8 Jun 2013, 6:22 pm by Stephen Bilkis
They were the creatures of the bloody "Glorious Revolution" of Seventeenth Century England. [read post]
16 May 2013, 12:30 am by Dan Ernst
Lyall explains that the book “should be of some interest in the USA since the movement for greater independence, both legislative and judicial had parallels in North America which were realised at the time and discussed in the 20th century” in the following works: Charles McIlwain, The American Revolution: A Constitutional Interpretation (1923); R. [read post]