Bob Cover often talked about what is inherent in the role of judge and about the relationship between judges and sovereigns. In addition to giving us his insights and his wisdom, Bob invariably enriched our views by offering us texts with which we had not been familiar. In that tradition, we provide the following essay on the images of justice—for Bob Cover
The eye cannot help but be drawn to the cover of Justice as Message, the new analysis by Carsten Sta...
Fabre Michel. Robert M. Cover. — Justice Accused, Antislavery and the Judicial Process. In: Revue Fr...
The article traces the developing image of a judge in Western legal thought. It starts with the famo...
Bob Cover often talked about what is inherent in the role of judge and about the relationship betwee...
This essay is about portraits: judicial portraits. It offers a case study of the interface between l...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
We raise some questions about the timeliness and timelessness of certain themes in Robert Cover’s ma...
In Representing Justice, Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis call our attention to something hiding in p...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
Very grateful as I am to have been invited to New Haven to reconsider Nomos and Narrative after twen...
The statue of Lady Justice, a blindfold over her eyes, holding scales in one hand and a sword in the...
This chapter considers the depiction of the judge – figurehead of the law – in the popular illustrat...
This is the final version of the article, which has been published in final form at: https://www.les...
The analysis of a work of art differs from legal analysis to the sole extent that the former necessa...
If we trace the space between an idea and its referent, between the move to judge and the act of jud...
The eye cannot help but be drawn to the cover of Justice as Message, the new analysis by Carsten Sta...
Fabre Michel. Robert M. Cover. — Justice Accused, Antislavery and the Judicial Process. In: Revue Fr...
The article traces the developing image of a judge in Western legal thought. It starts with the famo...
Bob Cover often talked about what is inherent in the role of judge and about the relationship betwee...
This essay is about portraits: judicial portraits. It offers a case study of the interface between l...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
We raise some questions about the timeliness and timelessness of certain themes in Robert Cover’s ma...
In Representing Justice, Judith Resnik and Dennis Curtis call our attention to something hiding in p...
Bob Cover was not content with the world. In his legal scholarship, this discontent expressed itself...
Very grateful as I am to have been invited to New Haven to reconsider Nomos and Narrative after twen...
The statue of Lady Justice, a blindfold over her eyes, holding scales in one hand and a sword in the...
This chapter considers the depiction of the judge – figurehead of the law – in the popular illustrat...
This is the final version of the article, which has been published in final form at: https://www.les...
The analysis of a work of art differs from legal analysis to the sole extent that the former necessa...
If we trace the space between an idea and its referent, between the move to judge and the act of jud...
The eye cannot help but be drawn to the cover of Justice as Message, the new analysis by Carsten Sta...
Fabre Michel. Robert M. Cover. — Justice Accused, Antislavery and the Judicial Process. In: Revue Fr...
The article traces the developing image of a judge in Western legal thought. It starts with the famo...