G. Edward White Review The William And Mary Quarterly, 58.3 This semiotic turn holds the promise of making legal documents, of omissionthat would have a powerful impact on American legal history amid the flurry http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/wm/58.3/br_1.html
Extractions: Purchase a research pass to gain two hour access to the entire History Cooperative web site. You will have full access to current issues of the William and Mary Quarterly (104.3-present). Note: the Research Pass does not provide access to JSTOR's holdings of the William and Mary Quarterly. Instititutions can: Activate your existing subscription so that we recognize your IP number ranges. Reviews of Books Reassessing John Marshall G. Edward White The Papers of John Marshall. Edited by Charles F. Hobson et al. Volume VIII: Volume IX: Volume X: . (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, published for the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture, 1995; 1998; 2000. Pp. xxxviii, 420; xxxviii, 396; xlii, 449. $70.00; $70.00; $60.00.)
Extractions: Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Expand all Collapse all Introduction History of historiography Ancient historiography Greco-Roman era Egyptian and Babylonian historiography Ancient history and biography Methods of Thucydides ... Early China Medieval historiography Europe from the 5th to the 11th century Europe from the 12th to the 14th century Byzantine historiography Muslim historiography Historiography in the European Renaissance The early Humanists Historical philology Notable works from the period Early modern historiography Spread of Humanism Protestant history changeTocNode('toc58864','img58864'); Historical outlook and legal histories Secularization Bacon, Descartes, and Mabillon Developments in 17th-century England ... Historiography in the Age of the Enlightenment Historiography in the 19th and 20th centuries Growth of specialization The historian's task German historiography Methodology of historiography ... Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled.
Idiot Legal Arguments Section Six Idiot legal Arguments A Casebook for Dealing with Extremist legal Arguments perp s FOIA request that the IRS work up its own legal history and proof of http://www.militia-watchdog.org/suss6.asp
Extractions: ADL Home Militia Watch Dog Archive Home Law Enforcement Search ... Contribute Last Updated, August 29, 1999 Idiot Legal Arguments: A Casebook for Dealing with Extremist Legal Arguments Part Six By Bernard J. Sussman, JD, MLS, CP Sixteenth Amendment not adopted mentioning " The Law that Never Was " by Benson & Beckman: US v. Wm.J. Benson (7th Cir 1991) 941 F2d 598 [one of the authors of Law/Never] amended on other grounds 957 F2d 301; [ Benson convicted of tax evasion and sentenced to four years of prison followed by five years probation. US v. Benson (7th Cir 1995) 67 F3d 641 reh.den 74 F3d 152; it appears he violated the terms of his parole. Benson v. US (ND IL 1997) 969 F.Supp 1129]; M.D. Miller v. US (7th Cir 1988) 868 F2d 236; ("The validity of that process [adopting the 16th Amendment] and if the resulting constitutional amendment are no longer open questions.") US v. Sitka (2d Cir 1988) 845 F2d 43 at 47 cert.den 488 US 827; US v. Thomas (7th Cir 1986) 788 F2d 1250 cert.den 479 US 853 (the leading case;
Legal Novels: An Annotated Bibliography legal Novels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 legal process, legal history or special problems or institutions of law. http://tarlton.law.utexas.edu/lpop/etext/kretschman.htm
Extractions: Summer 1979 TABLE OF CONTENTS Note to the Updated Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . John Wigmore's List of Legal Novels . . . . . . . . . An Annotated List of One Hundred
FindLaw Legal News But 17 monuments with no common appearance, history, or esthetic role scattered Compare Brief for legal Historians and Law Scholars as Amicus Curiae in http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/printer_friendly.pl?page=us/000/03-1500.ht
Sacco Vanzetti Project Press Release as the first case in American legal history in which the complete legal record Some were never part of the legal record but have become important to http://www.saccovanzettiproject.org/pages/press/press.htm
Transblawg: Dtv-Atlas Recht/Legal 'atlas' Margaret Marks Weblog on GermanEnglish legal translation. I bought thePenguin Atlas of World history (in two volumes) last week - it s scheduled for http://www.margaret-marks.com/Transblawg/archives/000796.html
Extractions: Margaret Marks: Weblog on German-English legal translation. Weblog juristische Übersetzung deutsch-englisch. Main A visit to the dentist took me past a university bookshop in Erlangen recently: Mencke-Blaesing There I picked up a couple of law books. The first was the dtv-Atlas Recht , Band 1. (To buy from amazon.de click on picture - but read on first!) EU law and criminal law. It has rave reviews on amazon.de and elsewhere, but I wonder about some of the illustrations. I just wonder who did the graphics. I mean, I know who did them, but did the author provide the idea and the design company just execute it? Of course, the title conjures up a different book, one that would show the differences between the (divided into romanisch and deutsch, and deutsch including Scandinavia), and the anglo-amerikanischer Rechtskreis (divided into englisch and amerikanisch - very odd). There is also a
History Matters Search Covers legal, social, and cultural aspects of segregation, black community researching American diplomacy, constitutional, political, and legal history. http://historymatters.gmu.edu/search.php?function=find&toppol=1&wwwhist=1
History Collections Policy Religious and legal mediaeval history are emphasised in the Department. Law The Faculty of Law collects works on legal history, particularly Canadian http://gateway.uvic.ca/dept/col/policies/histpol.html
Extractions: History Collections Policy PURPOSE OF THE COLLECTIONS POLICY This collection policy details those areas of significance to the research and teaching interests of the Department of History. It is a guide to the acquisition of material to support these activities. To this end the policy states the level of support to be given to the various areas and specifies the languages and formats in which materials will be purchased. The collection has been influenced by various historic agreements most importantly the TRIUL agreements dating from the mid-seventies. According to this agreement, The University of Victoria was to concentrate on Pacific ring issues and leave Latin America and much of the developing world to Simon Fraser University. The consequence has been that the Library has insignificant collections in Latin American history and only marginal collections on African and India history. In 1990 the Department introduced a PhD programme in Canadian history. Maintaining an in depth collection of materials in Canadian history is a priority for the Department and the Library.
Extractions: IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Accounting History Nov 2004 var if_Site_ID = "looksmart"; var if_sid="9"; var if_protocol=window.location.protocol; var if_tag = ""; var mep1="&pagename=art_articleqa3933_200411_n10297976_Towards_the_Great_"_Desideratum"_the_unification_of_the_accounting_bodies_in_England_1870-1880&cmcat=magid_qa3933_1&domain=www_findarticles_com&article=n10297976&pub=qa3933&source=proquest"; document.write(if_tag); Academy of Marketing Science Review Accounting Historians Journal, The Accounting History AgExporter ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Towards the Great "Desideratum": the unification of the accounting bodies in England 1870-1880 Accounting History Nov 2004 by Funnell, Warwick
From Robertson's The Baconian Heresy by making their nonlegal personages use terms which none but lawyers couldunderstand! There is no question of legal knowledge in the matter. http://www.sourcetext.com/lawlibrary/robertson/heresy3/06.htm
Extractions: SHAKESPEARE LAW LIBRARY Last Contents Next Lord Campbell's Case Part 6 26. Whereas some have argued that the conversation between Falstaff and the Chief Justice does not exhibit a close observation of the manner of speech of judges; Lord Campbell demonstrates that Lord Chancellor Jeffreys once actually did talk of laying a man "by the heels." He further delivers the judgment that the author who made Falstaff talk of "the wearing out of six fashions, which is four terms, or two actions," " must have been early initiated in the mysteries of terms and actions." So, it appears, was Greene, who in James IV (iii, 3) makes Andrew say that "dead" is "a terrible word at the latter end of a sessions," and further makes the Divine (v, 4) complain that the lawyers "delay your common pleas for years." And so must have been Dekker and Webster, since they make Justiniano in
Extractions: 16 Cardozo Law Review 241 (1994); reprinted by permission of the Cardozo Law Review Previous Section Next Section Title Page E-mail A turn to the auditory dimension is . . . more than a simple changing of variables. It begins as a deliberate decentering of a dominant tradition in order to discover what may be missing as a result of the traditional double reduction of vision as the main variable and metaphor. he growing popularity of aural metaphors in contemporary American legal discourse has already drawn some comment from observers, but so far it has attracted only the most superficial of explanations. In the midst of a culture saturated with printed and electronic texts and bombarded by images from television and movies, it cannot be denied that seeing remains at the center of American sensory experience. There is nonetheless evidence to suggest that in the late twentieth century we are increasingly fascinated with - and in a few instances, are even becoming biased towards - aural expression and experience.
History | Undergraduate Program history 285 Topics in Historical Analysis legal Thought in the American Significant works of legal history will serve to introduce students to major http://www.history.emory.edu/undergrad/atlas/fall01.html
Extractions: For information on registration, preregistration, and days and times, please refer to the Registrar's Schedule of Courses. History 190-000 Freshman Colloquium: Warriors at Peace Ravina CANCELLED FRESHMEN ONLY Mann; MAX:9; WRT: Old System: No; New System: No Content: European expansion into the Americas after 1492 made possible increased production of sugar and other staples to satisfy changing patterns of consumption in the Old World. Production of many of these commodities took place on plantations and employed the labor of African slaves. This course draws on history, literature, film, and art history to probe the reasons for the rise of slavery in the New World, and its impact on Africa and the Americas, focusing especially on the experiences of the slaves. Texts: Mintz, Sweetness and Power ; Eltis, et. al., The DuBois Consolidated Slave Trade Database ; Klein, The Atlantic Slave Trade ; Northrup
Extractions: By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z T Related Category: Legal Terms And Concepts Temple, the, district of the City of London, England. The name refers to two of the four Inns of Court , the Middle Temple and the Inner Temple. The Temple was originally the English seat of the famous order of Knights Templars. The Inner Temple hall and library and the Temple Church : a Norman round church dedicated in 1185 : have been restored in their original styles following severe damage in World War II. The Temple Bar is the gate designed by Christopher Wren c.1672 on the site of the bar or chain that marked one of the entrances to the City of London. The Bar was removed in 1878 and is now in Theobalds Park near Waltham; there is a monument on the old London site, at the junction of Fleet St. and the Strand. Here the lord mayor officially receives personages from outside the City. In the 17th and 18th cent. heads of traitors were displayed there.
Extractions: One of the disappointments as one studies the history of the Middle Ages is the scantiness of personal information about the great men whose acts, and effect upon subsequent ages, are yet really well known to us. Only too often is the personage himself a mere silhouette against the gold and scarlet of the event. Pope Alexander III, who summoned the eleventh General Council, is an instance in point, for in the history of the Church, by his effect, he stands out as one of the six or seven greatest popes of all, one whose laws and creative institutional work still influence the life of the Church. His reign, again, is one of the longest of all, close on twenty-two years. And yet, much as we know about his career, the man himself escapes us utterly. As to what this pope accomplished, a French scholar of our own time, the author of the most complete study yet made of Alexander III, can say that he "is one of the chief founders of the Roman all-powerfulness over the clergy of the Church, with a very high idea of his office, ruling the clergy by the aid of trustworthy assistants, and thanks to means of government that are steadily being improved, intervening everywhere throughout the Church by his legates, setting in order and controlling the jurisdiction of the archbishops in their provinces and the bishops in their sees, and everywhere seeking to strengthen the links that bind the Holy See to the various local establishments"[1]; such is Alexander III, the first pope effective on the grand scale in the whole daily life of the universal church.
Book Review: "By The Book: Legal ABCs For The Printed Word" Chapter 1 A legal Viewpoint, covers threshold legal issues in the publishing concern Native Americans or other events or personages in the Southwest. http://www.rjg.com/rjg/bybook.html
Extractions: 488 pp. $45.00 The latest attempt by Martha Blue to crack the writing field fails dismally. This wildly uneven work attempts to guide the small- to medium size publisher through the legal landscape from authorship to manufacture to distribution. Blue, in her introductory caveat states that, This legal guide assists publishing concerns engaged in producing and distributing the printed word. Neither I nor the publisher make any expressed [sic] or implied warranty with regard to the forms' use or freedom from error. Each form must be reviewed by a knowledgable [sic] lawyer so that his or her expertise may be applied to your specific legal problem. With the above warning in place, why should publishers and attorneys purchase this book? I propose two answers, one of which only addresses the aesthetic, not substantive element. First, By the Book The Publishing Law Handbook Entertainment Industry Contracts By the Book is beautifully designed (save for the absence of running headers informing the reader of his place in the book) with readable typeface, leather binding and marbleized cover and paper designed by Peggy Skycraft. It is one of those volumes which make a "handsome addition to
Social Sciences and Law, US history, Psychology and Sociology, World history FindLaw legalInternet Guide Find legal information on the Internet from online code, http://www.merritt.edu/~lrc/social.html
Extractions: An extensive collection of tales from around the world, many edited or translated by D. L. Ashliman, a professor of Germanic Languages and Literature. The alphabetical list has stories in categories such as frog kings and princes, nightmares, and werewolf and witchcraft legends. The list also includes stories from such collections and authors as Aesop's Fables, Bulfinch's Mythology, Chaucer, and the Grimm Brothers.
The Tichborne Claimant The Tichborne Claimant litigation was a long and complex legal motion, action in British legal history, per capita it remains the most expensive. http://www.sniggle.net/tichborne.php
Extractions: The Tichborne Claimant Being the eldest son of an immensely wealthy family it was expected that his life would be spent in luxury whilst waiting for his father to die to inherit, however, going against his mothers wishes he joined the army in 1849 and used family connections to join the illustrious 6 th A prolific letter writer and journal chronicler he was in almost constant contact with his overtly possessive mother, sending her and other relatives full details of his travels, hunting, fishing and natural history expeditions with Native Americans, and sending stuffed birds, skins of exotic animals and other souvenirs back to Tichborne Hall to be added to its ancestral collection. Retainers and estate staff followed his travels closely, enthralled by the exotic locales he visited and his mother allowed them to read letters he sent home. Like Indiana Jones, Roger roamed South America in search of adventure for about a year before deciding to sail from Rio to New York onboard the British registered cargo schooner, Bella . On the morning of April 30 they set sail but four days into the voyage it foundered either as the result of bad weather or possibly capsizing due to improperly stowed bags of coffee shifting in the cargo hold in rough seas and knocking off the center of gravity. Whatever befell Bella happened quickly; no one managed to abandon ship, and the only trace discovered was an upturned long boat and debris field. An inquest was held and the
Zangyan Research Into Politics and legal System.?In the last decade or more, including the legal Status of Tibet in history (a Chinese translation) by Li http://www.tibetinfor.com.cn/tibetzt-en/zxyj/01/01_03.htm