In this swiftly moving age, with its revolutionary advances in so many diverse fields of activity, it is well to pause and reflect upon the Role of the Law in American life. Unfortunately, in our pre-occupation with daily chores, we miss the trees for the forest, for to a large extent the Lawyer\u27s time is taken up with private interests which, while important to the individual, do not touch the great and vital issues affecting the community. Yet no Lawyer can have any real pride in his profession unless he has the capacity for interpreting to himself and to his fellow Americans the full Majesty and Meaning of the Law
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
During the greater part of the past hundred years the American lawschools enjoyed a spectacular succ...
Published as Chapter 3 in The Cambridge History of Law in America, Volume II, The Long Nineteenth Ce...
In this swiftly moving age, with its revolutionary advances in so many diverse fields of activity, i...
It is not my purpose to unduly emphasize the light which the study of the laws of a people throws up...
Great men have admonished us never to forget the continuing relevance of history in the Anglo-Americ...
Review of The Law in America: A History, by Bernard Schwartz, McGraw-Hill, 197
During the last half-century, Christopher W. Brooks (1948–2014) established himself as the foremost ...
Anglo-American Legal History can be a very difficult subject to teach because of its scope. This art...
This introductory text explores the historical origins of the main legal institutions that came to c...
The Founding Fathers, their children, and their grandchildren found themselves living in a new natio...
Law is frozen history. In an elementary sense, everything we study when we study law is the report o...
From the author\u27s introduction: Paul C. Kurtz wrote well, spoke and argued eloquently, wore a nic...
Rufus Choate said of the legal profession that better than any other calling in life it enabled its ...
The past few decades have witnessed a welcome expansion in historians’ understanding of English lega...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
During the greater part of the past hundred years the American lawschools enjoyed a spectacular succ...
Published as Chapter 3 in The Cambridge History of Law in America, Volume II, The Long Nineteenth Ce...
In this swiftly moving age, with its revolutionary advances in so many diverse fields of activity, i...
It is not my purpose to unduly emphasize the light which the study of the laws of a people throws up...
Great men have admonished us never to forget the continuing relevance of history in the Anglo-Americ...
Review of The Law in America: A History, by Bernard Schwartz, McGraw-Hill, 197
During the last half-century, Christopher W. Brooks (1948–2014) established himself as the foremost ...
Anglo-American Legal History can be a very difficult subject to teach because of its scope. This art...
This introductory text explores the historical origins of the main legal institutions that came to c...
The Founding Fathers, their children, and their grandchildren found themselves living in a new natio...
Law is frozen history. In an elementary sense, everything we study when we study law is the report o...
From the author\u27s introduction: Paul C. Kurtz wrote well, spoke and argued eloquently, wore a nic...
Rufus Choate said of the legal profession that better than any other calling in life it enabled its ...
The past few decades have witnessed a welcome expansion in historians’ understanding of English lega...
Historical interest in popular constitutionalism has enlivened the search for the origins of judicia...
During the greater part of the past hundred years the American lawschools enjoyed a spectacular succ...
Published as Chapter 3 in The Cambridge History of Law in America, Volume II, The Long Nineteenth Ce...