IN 1834 Story published the first edition of his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws. With the publication of this work, it is now generally admitted, a new era began in the treatment of the subject. Italian, French, Belgian, Dutch, and German writers, among whom are to be found the greatest jurists of their time, had preceded Story in dealing with these questions. Bartolus, Dumoulin, D\u27Argentre, Rodenburg, John and Paul Voet, Huber, Froland, Boullenois, Bouhier, Cocceji, and Hert are a few of the names. The writers lived in different ages and under different social and political conditions. Questions of the conflict of laws attracted the attention of the Italian jurists as early as the twelfth century. In northern Italy independent bod...
Professor Juenger argues that both the unilateralist and the multilateralist schools of thought shar...
At the turn of the seventeenth century, jurists such as Alberico Gentili (1552–1608) and Hugo Grotiu...
This volume, the first in Ernst Rabel\u27s monumental comparative treatise on the conflict of laws, ...
IN 1834 Story published the first edition of his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws. With the publ...
Of the vast number of treatises on the Conflict of Laws Huber\u27s De Conflictu Legum Diversarum in...
To Joseph Story goes the credit of having introduced to American and to English law that field which...
Les conflits de lois du XIIe au XVIIIe siècle. L’étude des conflits de lois et des méthodes de leur ...
THE writer\u27s interest in the conflict of laws coextends substantially with the life of the Michig...
Rudolf von Jhering's famous lecture entitled "The Struggle for Law" which, since its first publicati...
Jean de Blanot, the enigmatic Iacobus Aurelianus, and Jean Blanc de Marseille are the first known Fr...
This 14th century philosopher extended the theories of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas in proposing the...
Much acute intellectual ability, energy, and expository skill has been . . . uneconomically spent in...
This latest product of the American Law Institute bears the unmistakable imprimatur of the man who h...
The aim of the article is to present the origin and the development of new approaches in the Americ...
In 1981 the Journal of Legal History published the essay “A ‘Revisiting’ of the Comparison between ‘...
Professor Juenger argues that both the unilateralist and the multilateralist schools of thought shar...
At the turn of the seventeenth century, jurists such as Alberico Gentili (1552–1608) and Hugo Grotiu...
This volume, the first in Ernst Rabel\u27s monumental comparative treatise on the conflict of laws, ...
IN 1834 Story published the first edition of his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws. With the publ...
Of the vast number of treatises on the Conflict of Laws Huber\u27s De Conflictu Legum Diversarum in...
To Joseph Story goes the credit of having introduced to American and to English law that field which...
Les conflits de lois du XIIe au XVIIIe siècle. L’étude des conflits de lois et des méthodes de leur ...
THE writer\u27s interest in the conflict of laws coextends substantially with the life of the Michig...
Rudolf von Jhering's famous lecture entitled "The Struggle for Law" which, since its first publicati...
Jean de Blanot, the enigmatic Iacobus Aurelianus, and Jean Blanc de Marseille are the first known Fr...
This 14th century philosopher extended the theories of Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas in proposing the...
Much acute intellectual ability, energy, and expository skill has been . . . uneconomically spent in...
This latest product of the American Law Institute bears the unmistakable imprimatur of the man who h...
The aim of the article is to present the origin and the development of new approaches in the Americ...
In 1981 the Journal of Legal History published the essay “A ‘Revisiting’ of the Comparison between ‘...
Professor Juenger argues that both the unilateralist and the multilateralist schools of thought shar...
At the turn of the seventeenth century, jurists such as Alberico Gentili (1552–1608) and Hugo Grotiu...
This volume, the first in Ernst Rabel\u27s monumental comparative treatise on the conflict of laws, ...