Of all professionals, lawyers are the most dependent on books. All of their resource material is in written form. To know the quality of the practicing bar, the bench, legal studies, and legal scholarship in general, one must know the books on which they are founded. A census of law books present in the libraries of colonial Virginians can shed some light on the law and the lawyers who shaped the colony and the nation
The primary goal of this new edition of A Guide to Legal Research in Virginia is to expand coverage ...
In 1607 Virginia was settled by a London-based corporation, and the English settlers brought with th...
The number and variety of law books now in use is so great that lawyers can not hope to possess rela...
During the eighteenth and nineteenth century, law books of various types contained the vital informa...
In 1700 the only methods of legal education in England and Virginia were apprenticeship to a practis...
With this issue, the Editorial Board of the University of Richmond Law Review renews the publication...
Virginia had a government of dual legislative authorities in the seventeenth and early eighteenth ce...
Case law, including published cases and cases that have never been published, is the basis of the co...
This second edition of Sir John Randolph\u27s Virginia reports was prompted by the discovery in the ...
Books are indispensable to lawyers and judges, containing as they do the official record of the laws...
Many methods of legal education have been used over the years. Each has its strengths and its weakne...
A Review of Law and Society in Puritan Massachusetts: Essex County, 1629-1692 by David Thomas Konig...
Erwin Surrency, a professional Jaw librarian, during a long career as such, was a pioneer in the fie...
WILLIAMSBURG -- The Layman\u27s Guide to Virginia Law, a work for nonlawyers, has been written and...
The Hampton L. Carson Collection of Anglo-American Common Law comprises one of the largest collectio...
The primary goal of this new edition of A Guide to Legal Research in Virginia is to expand coverage ...
In 1607 Virginia was settled by a London-based corporation, and the English settlers brought with th...
The number and variety of law books now in use is so great that lawyers can not hope to possess rela...
During the eighteenth and nineteenth century, law books of various types contained the vital informa...
In 1700 the only methods of legal education in England and Virginia were apprenticeship to a practis...
With this issue, the Editorial Board of the University of Richmond Law Review renews the publication...
Virginia had a government of dual legislative authorities in the seventeenth and early eighteenth ce...
Case law, including published cases and cases that have never been published, is the basis of the co...
This second edition of Sir John Randolph\u27s Virginia reports was prompted by the discovery in the ...
Books are indispensable to lawyers and judges, containing as they do the official record of the laws...
Many methods of legal education have been used over the years. Each has its strengths and its weakne...
A Review of Law and Society in Puritan Massachusetts: Essex County, 1629-1692 by David Thomas Konig...
Erwin Surrency, a professional Jaw librarian, during a long career as such, was a pioneer in the fie...
WILLIAMSBURG -- The Layman\u27s Guide to Virginia Law, a work for nonlawyers, has been written and...
The Hampton L. Carson Collection of Anglo-American Common Law comprises one of the largest collectio...
The primary goal of this new edition of A Guide to Legal Research in Virginia is to expand coverage ...
In 1607 Virginia was settled by a London-based corporation, and the English settlers brought with th...
The number and variety of law books now in use is so great that lawyers can not hope to possess rela...