The eight jural relations defined by Wesley Hohfeld unite the many legal relationships that exist in American law. Together they are all part of a single structure, and this structure forms both a normal curve and a square of opposition. The two images express the process of legal analysis
Wesley Hohfeld is known the world over as the legal theorist who famously developed a taxonomy of le...
With the article of Professor Clark, published in the present issue, I am in entire agreement. The r...
In his latest criticism of the Hohfeld system of legal analysis, Professor Albert Kocourek expresses...
The eight jural relations defined by Wesley Hohfeld unite the many legal relationships that exist in...
In a number of articles published in several law magazines Albert Kocourek has taken occasion to con...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld is one of the great unsung heroes of twentieth century legal theory. His epon...
It is the goal of this article to provide a formal system in which all the Hohfeldian terms are form...
Wesley Hohfeld was an important legal theorist from the early 20th century. His article, Some Funda...
The thesis presented here is that the eight jural relations may be effectively graphed as the eight ...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld’s 1913 article, Fundamental Legal Conceptions as Applied in Judicial Reasonin...
Wesley N. Hohfeld tried to split the atom of legal discourse and to identify its elementary particle...
This very short book is a reprinting of the two articles in which Hohfeld explained his eight types ...
INFERRED, OR AT THE MOST rebuttably presumed, is a slight acquaintanceship on the part of the reader...
Careful communication is frequently of central importance in law. The language used to communicate e...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld, born in 1879, died prematurely in 1918. He left only a few law journal artic...
Wesley Hohfeld is known the world over as the legal theorist who famously developed a taxonomy of le...
With the article of Professor Clark, published in the present issue, I am in entire agreement. The r...
In his latest criticism of the Hohfeld system of legal analysis, Professor Albert Kocourek expresses...
The eight jural relations defined by Wesley Hohfeld unite the many legal relationships that exist in...
In a number of articles published in several law magazines Albert Kocourek has taken occasion to con...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld is one of the great unsung heroes of twentieth century legal theory. His epon...
It is the goal of this article to provide a formal system in which all the Hohfeldian terms are form...
Wesley Hohfeld was an important legal theorist from the early 20th century. His article, Some Funda...
The thesis presented here is that the eight jural relations may be effectively graphed as the eight ...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld’s 1913 article, Fundamental Legal Conceptions as Applied in Judicial Reasonin...
Wesley N. Hohfeld tried to split the atom of legal discourse and to identify its elementary particle...
This very short book is a reprinting of the two articles in which Hohfeld explained his eight types ...
INFERRED, OR AT THE MOST rebuttably presumed, is a slight acquaintanceship on the part of the reader...
Careful communication is frequently of central importance in law. The language used to communicate e...
Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld, born in 1879, died prematurely in 1918. He left only a few law journal artic...
Wesley Hohfeld is known the world over as the legal theorist who famously developed a taxonomy of le...
With the article of Professor Clark, published in the present issue, I am in entire agreement. The r...
In his latest criticism of the Hohfeld system of legal analysis, Professor Albert Kocourek expresses...