This volume contains a series of six lectures delivered on the Storrs foundation at the Yale Law School and is a worthy addition to the many series previously delivered on this foundation by leaders of juristic thought. Dean Pound first defines for us the Function of Legal Philosophy; then follow chapters on the End of Law, the Application of Law, Liability, Property, and Contract
In these days, out of the great mass of legal publications comparatively few emerge as real achievem...
A review of E. Bodenheimer, Treatise on justice, W. Friedmann, Legal theory, 5U., and B. Wortley, Ju...
Here in 25 chapters, 214 selections, and some 1200 pages of readings, designed primarily to be used ...
This volume contains a series of six lectures delivered on the Storrs foundation at the Yale Law Sch...
This volume contains the brilliant lectures delivered by Dean Pound in the summer of 1921 as one of ...
Huntington Cairns has provided lawyers, judges, and laymen with a long-needed guide to the thinking ...
IN the maze of currents and cross-currents that characterize contemporarywriting on jurisprudence an...
Here is a companion volume for the two preceding books written by Judge Cardozo within the past half...
The author addresses issues raised by commentators on his book, Philosophy of Law (2011)
Most of our judges and law professors spend a large part of their livesjustifying or criticizing var...
The title of this brilliant little volume might, more accurately, have been, The Spirits of the Com...
It has been aptly said that the definition of law is the battle ground of jurisprudence. The author ...
Journal ArticleTo write about Philosophy; and law is both odd and daunting. It is odd because the to...
This book contains seven chapters discussing the following as possible sources of law: the Sovereign...
A consideration of these volumes, which has made up in duration what it may have lacked in intensive...
In these days, out of the great mass of legal publications comparatively few emerge as real achievem...
A review of E. Bodenheimer, Treatise on justice, W. Friedmann, Legal theory, 5U., and B. Wortley, Ju...
Here in 25 chapters, 214 selections, and some 1200 pages of readings, designed primarily to be used ...
This volume contains a series of six lectures delivered on the Storrs foundation at the Yale Law Sch...
This volume contains the brilliant lectures delivered by Dean Pound in the summer of 1921 as one of ...
Huntington Cairns has provided lawyers, judges, and laymen with a long-needed guide to the thinking ...
IN the maze of currents and cross-currents that characterize contemporarywriting on jurisprudence an...
Here is a companion volume for the two preceding books written by Judge Cardozo within the past half...
The author addresses issues raised by commentators on his book, Philosophy of Law (2011)
Most of our judges and law professors spend a large part of their livesjustifying or criticizing var...
The title of this brilliant little volume might, more accurately, have been, The Spirits of the Com...
It has been aptly said that the definition of law is the battle ground of jurisprudence. The author ...
Journal ArticleTo write about Philosophy; and law is both odd and daunting. It is odd because the to...
This book contains seven chapters discussing the following as possible sources of law: the Sovereign...
A consideration of these volumes, which has made up in duration what it may have lacked in intensive...
In these days, out of the great mass of legal publications comparatively few emerge as real achievem...
A review of E. Bodenheimer, Treatise on justice, W. Friedmann, Legal theory, 5U., and B. Wortley, Ju...
Here in 25 chapters, 214 selections, and some 1200 pages of readings, designed primarily to be used ...