Adventures of the Law
₨ 2,800.00
Roger D. Groot (School of Law, Washington and Lee University): Isolt’s trial and ordeal: a legal-historical analysis – Dafydd Jenkins (Department of Law, University of Walses, Aberystwyth): Borrowings in the Welsh lawbooks – Paul Brand (All Souls College, Oxford): The use and adaptation of the action of replevin in Ireland during the reign of Edward I – Frederik Pedersen (School of History and History of Art, University of Aberdeen): The Danes and the marriage break-up of Philip II of France – W.D.H. Sellar (School of Law, University of Edinburgh): Birlaw courts and birleymen – C.H. van Rhee (Dept of Merajuridica, Law School, Maastricht University): The role of exceptions in Continental civil procedure – Kevin Costello (Faculty of Law, University College, Dublin): Sir William Petty and the Court of Admiralty in Restoration Ireland – Daniel M. Klerman (Law School, University of Southern California) and Paul G. Mahoney (School of Law, University of Virginia): The value of judicial independence: evidence from eighteenth-century England – Julie Evans (Dept of Criminology, University of Melbourne): The rule of law in the settlercolonial encounter: the case of Western Australia – David V. Williams (Faculty of Law, University of Aukland): Indigenous customary rights and the common law in Aotearoa New Zealand – N.M. Dawson (School of Law, Queen’s University, Belfast): Colourful adventures of the law: legal regulation of colour as sign from heraldry to trade mark law – Richard W. Ireland (Dept of Law, University of Wales, Aberystwyth): Charles Hunt’s haircut: getting gown to the roots of a legal adventure – Thomas Krause (Law Library, Christian-Albrechts-Universitat, Kiel): The influence of Sir Walter Crofton’s ‘Irish system: on prison reform in Germany – Russell K. Osgood (Grinnell College, Iowa): Law in early Iowa: one adventure – Joshua Getzler and Mike Macnair (St Hugh’s College, Oxford):The firm as an entitiy before the Companies Acts – Colum Kenny (School of Communications) Adventures in training: the Irish genesis of the ‘remarkable and far-sighted’ Select Committee on Legal Education, 1846 – Richard Whiting (School of History, University of Leeds): Politics, law and work in modern Britain: the 1965 Redundancy Payments Act – Peter Spiller (School of Law, University of Waikato): An adventure of the law: the Spanish Champagne case
Description
Roger D. Groot (School of Law, Washington and Lee University): Isolt’s trial and ordeal: a legal-historical analysis – Dafydd Jenkins (Department of Law, University of Walses, Aberystwyth): Borrowings in the Welsh lawbooks – Paul Brand (All Souls College, Oxford): The use and adaptation of the action of replevin in Ireland during the reign of Edward I – Frederik Pedersen (School of History and History of Art, University of Aberdeen): The Danes and the marriage break-up of Philip II of France – W.D.H. Sellar (School of Law, University of Edinburgh): Birlaw courts and birleymen – C.H. van Rhee (Dept of Merajuridica, Law School, Maastricht University): The role of exceptions in Continental civil procedure – Kevin Costello (Faculty of Law, University College, Dublin): Sir William Petty and the Court of Admiralty in Restoration Ireland – Daniel M. Klerman (Law School, University of Southern California) and Paul G. Mahoney (School of Law, University of Virginia): The value of judicial independence: evidence from eighteenth-century England – Julie Evans (Dept of Criminology, University of Melbourne): The rule of law in the settlercolonial encounter: the case of Western Australia – David V. Williams (Faculty of Law, University of Aukland): Indigenous customary rights and the common law in Aotearoa New Zealand – N.M. Dawson (School of Law, Queen’s University, Belfast): Colourful adventures of the law: legal regulation of colour as sign from heraldry to trade mark law – Richard W. Ireland (Dept of Law, University of Wales, Aberystwyth): Charles Hunt’s haircut: getting gown to the roots of a legal adventure – Thomas Krause (Law Library, Christian-Albrechts-Universitat, Kiel): The influence of Sir Walter Crofton’s ‘Irish system: on prison reform in Germany – Russell K. Osgood (Grinnell College, Iowa): Law in early Iowa: one adventure – Joshua Getzler and Mike Macnair (St Hugh’s College, Oxford):The firm as an entitiy before the Companies Acts – Colum Kenny (School of Communications) Adventures in training: the Irish genesis of the ‘remarkable and far-sighted’ Select Committee on Legal Education, 1846 – Richard Whiting (School of History, University of Leeds): Politics, law and work in modern Britain: the 1965 Redundancy Payments Act – Peter Spiller (School of Law, University of Waikato): An adventure of the law: the Spanish Champagne case
Additional information
Authors | Paul Brand, Kevin Costello & WN Osborough |
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Cover-Types | Hardcover |
ISBN/ISSN | 9781851829361 |
Language | English |
Pages | 350 |
Publishers | Four Court Press |
Year of Publication | 2005 A.D |