In 1941, an Italian law professor arrived in the United States to make his home here. Born in Russia during Czarist days, he was educated in Austria, England, and Italy, finally settling there and becoming a citizen. A member of the Italian bar and teacher of law at the Universities of Florence and Rome, he found himself in 1939 unwanted in his adopted homeland. He went to France, where he practiced law until coming to this country. In New York City he joined the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research, remaining in that post for five years, until he died, at the age of 44, in an airplane accident. His name was Alexander Pekelis. During his short stay in the United States, Pekelis showed himself to be an acute commentator on ...
James Franklin Fitzpatrick was born in the small northern Indiana town of Bluffton, on January 18, 1...
The American Society of International Law Committee recommended that the Manley 0. Hudson Medal be a...
Few have served the public with greater distinction than Justice John Paul Stevens. That service beg...
In 1941, an Italian law professor arrived in the United States to make his home here. Born in Russia...
Frank Murphy\u27s extensive public service is discussed by others in this issue. I write of him as a...
Working people and disfavored groups were central concerns of Frank Murphy, the last Michigan Law Sc...
THE late Justice Murphy was the most underestimated member of the Supreme Court in our time. The bul...
Justice Murphy would have observed his tenth anniversary on the Supreme Court on February 5, 1950. J...
It is fitting that the Michigan Law Review should dedicate this issue to the memory of Mr. Justice M...
In 1884, Charles Evans Hughes qualified as a member of the New York bar at age 22. After seven years...
Columbia Law School’s postwar class of 1948, perhaps more than any other, has brought remarkable dis...
On July 28,2011, Eric Stein, pillar of international law, pioneer of the legal study of European int...
John Simpson Hastings was born in Washington, Indiana, in 1898. After two years at Indiana Universit...
In the fall of 1976, Richard R. Baxter, the Manley O. Hudson Professor of International Law at Harva...
William Tod Otto was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on January 19, 1816. Otto received both his...
James Franklin Fitzpatrick was born in the small northern Indiana town of Bluffton, on January 18, 1...
The American Society of International Law Committee recommended that the Manley 0. Hudson Medal be a...
Few have served the public with greater distinction than Justice John Paul Stevens. That service beg...
In 1941, an Italian law professor arrived in the United States to make his home here. Born in Russia...
Frank Murphy\u27s extensive public service is discussed by others in this issue. I write of him as a...
Working people and disfavored groups were central concerns of Frank Murphy, the last Michigan Law Sc...
THE late Justice Murphy was the most underestimated member of the Supreme Court in our time. The bul...
Justice Murphy would have observed his tenth anniversary on the Supreme Court on February 5, 1950. J...
It is fitting that the Michigan Law Review should dedicate this issue to the memory of Mr. Justice M...
In 1884, Charles Evans Hughes qualified as a member of the New York bar at age 22. After seven years...
Columbia Law School’s postwar class of 1948, perhaps more than any other, has brought remarkable dis...
On July 28,2011, Eric Stein, pillar of international law, pioneer of the legal study of European int...
John Simpson Hastings was born in Washington, Indiana, in 1898. After two years at Indiana Universit...
In the fall of 1976, Richard R. Baxter, the Manley O. Hudson Professor of International Law at Harva...
William Tod Otto was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on January 19, 1816. Otto received both his...
James Franklin Fitzpatrick was born in the small northern Indiana town of Bluffton, on January 18, 1...
The American Society of International Law Committee recommended that the Manley 0. Hudson Medal be a...
Few have served the public with greater distinction than Justice John Paul Stevens. That service beg...