The book is a collection nine essays, five of which attempt to cover the whole or much of the last 100 years for a specific topic (constitutional, family, water, energy, and property law) through the identification of important or exemplary cases. The other four focus on either shorter time periods (a study of the makeup of the bench in its earliest years or the court’s treatment of women’s issues since the 1970s) or on only a pair of cases (over conscription during the First World War or Native hunting rights). There are large areas of law left out of this coverage: for instance, criminal law is only dealt with in passing, while employment and labor law is left out entirely
This provides a short review and commentary on Peter Russell\u27s extraordinary new work on aborigin...
Intended to mark the centennial of Saskatchewan’s becoming a province in 1905, this collection of 18...
This book is avowedly an attempt to reveal the story of political and economic strife which lies hid...
The book is a collection nine essays, five of which attempt to cover the whole or much of the last 1...
The subject of Shirley and Wayne Weigand’s Books on Trial is the prosecution of several Community Pa...
Edwards v. Attorney General of Canada ( the Persons case ) is a landmark Canadian legal decision. By...
The United States Supreme Court accepts for review less than two percent of the cases presented to i...
James W. Hewitt answers that question and many more in his history of the Nebraska Supreme Court, Sl...
Book review: The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The First Hundred Years, 1789-1888. By David P. ...
More an anthology than a systematic history, The History of Nebraska Law represents a significant co...
Rebuilding Native Nations is a powerful restatement and reconsideration of American Indian self-dete...
Book review: The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is. By William H. Rehnquist. New York: William Mo...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
Natives and Settlers Now and Then is a slim volume that will be of great interest to scholars of Ind...
This provides a short review and commentary on Peter Russell\u27s extraordinary new work on aborigin...
Intended to mark the centennial of Saskatchewan’s becoming a province in 1905, this collection of 18...
This book is avowedly an attempt to reveal the story of political and economic strife which lies hid...
The book is a collection nine essays, five of which attempt to cover the whole or much of the last 1...
The subject of Shirley and Wayne Weigand’s Books on Trial is the prosecution of several Community Pa...
Edwards v. Attorney General of Canada ( the Persons case ) is a landmark Canadian legal decision. By...
The United States Supreme Court accepts for review less than two percent of the cases presented to i...
James W. Hewitt answers that question and many more in his history of the Nebraska Supreme Court, Sl...
Book review: The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The First Hundred Years, 1789-1888. By David P. ...
More an anthology than a systematic history, The History of Nebraska Law represents a significant co...
Rebuilding Native Nations is a powerful restatement and reconsideration of American Indian self-dete...
Book review: The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is. By William H. Rehnquist. New York: William Mo...
If ever a text should be required for a foundational American Indian Studies course, The State of th...
Natives and Settlers Now and Then is a slim volume that will be of great interest to scholars of Ind...
This provides a short review and commentary on Peter Russell\u27s extraordinary new work on aborigin...
Intended to mark the centennial of Saskatchewan’s becoming a province in 1905, this collection of 18...
This book is avowedly an attempt to reveal the story of political and economic strife which lies hid...