Search for: "King v. Oxford" Results 1 - 20 of 199
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8 Nov 2007, 12:57 pm
King (University of Oxford - Keble College) has posted The Doctrine of Odious Debt in International Law: A Restatement on SSRN. [read post]
24 Sep 2020, 6:42 am
Thomas Schultz (King's College London - Law) & Federico Ortino (King's College London - Law) have published The Oxford Handbook of International Arbitration (Oxford Univ. [read post]
6 Jul 2009, 6:00 pm
Just out from Oxford University Press is The Ghost of Jim Crow: How Southern Moderates Used Brown v. [read post]
27 Jan 2023, 6:30 am by ernst
Grunwick Processing Laboratories Ltd v ACAS: The Social Contract, Trade Union Recognition, and the Rule of LawKD Ewing (King's College London, UK)7. [read post]
26 Jan 2024, 1:00 pm by ernst
Cassell & Co Ltd v Broome (1972): Maritime, Generational and Judicial ClashesJames Goudkamp (University of Oxford, UK)6. [read post]
31 Oct 2023, 9:00 am by Rania Combs
  Will of Naunakhte The Will, written in hieratic script on papyrus, was made by Naunakhte, an Egyptian woman who lived more than 3,000 years ago during the reign of King Ramesses V. [read post]
2 Jan 2017, 4:52 pm by Sabrina I. Pacifici
Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, Forthcoming; King’s College London Law School Research Paper No. 2017-03. [read post]
6 Oct 2014, 4:05 am by Howard Friedman
, Religion as a Social Determinant of Public Health, (Oxford Univ. [read post]
26 Jan 2014, 12:30 am by Emily Prifogle
There's also a review of David Bodenhamer's The Revolutionary Constitution (Oxford)." [read post]
25 Apr 2012, 1:22 pm by Margaret Wood
  Certainly, the first occurrence of the term, Salic Law according to the Oxford English Dictionary, dates to 1548. [read post]
24 May 2019, 1:01 am by rhapsodyinbooks
Edward VII’s son George, the Prince of Wales, became King George V upon his father’s death in 1910. [read post]
18 Nov 2014, 9:01 pm by Michael C. Dorf
Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in King v. [read post]
6 Jan 2015, 9:30 pm by Dan Ernst
It takes the decision of the Court of King’s Bench in Banks v Whetson (1596) as a starting point for considering the legal structures which tended to ensure the perfect fungibility of commodity monies in the late medieval and early modern periods. [read post]