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Articles 1 - 8 of 8

Full-Text Articles in Law

Roll Over, Llewellyn?, Peter A. Alces Sep 2019

Roll Over, Llewellyn?, Peter A. Alces

Peter A. Alces

No abstract provided.


Commercial Codification As Negotiation, Peter A. Alces, David Frisch Sep 2019

Commercial Codification As Negotiation, Peter A. Alces, David Frisch

Peter A. Alces

No abstract provided.


Vladimir Putin And The Rule Of Law In Russia, Jeffrey Kahn Sep 2014

Vladimir Putin And The Rule Of Law In Russia, Jeffrey Kahn

Georgia Journal of International & Comparative Law

No abstract provided.


Commercial Codification As Negotiation, Peter A. Alces, David Frisch Oct 1998

Commercial Codification As Negotiation, Peter A. Alces, David Frisch

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Roll Over, Llewellyn?, Peter A. Alces Jan 1993

Roll Over, Llewellyn?, Peter A. Alces

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


A Jurisprudential Perspective For The True Codification Of Payments Law, Peter A. Alces Jan 1984

A Jurisprudential Perspective For The True Codification Of Payments Law, Peter A. Alces

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


The Uniform Commercial Code Comes Of Age, Roy L. Steinheimer Jr. May 1967

The Uniform Commercial Code Comes Of Age, Roy L. Steinheimer Jr.

Michigan Law Review

Once upon a time back in the elegant and well-ordered Victorian age, a new organization known as the National Conference of State Boards of Commissioners for Promoting Uniformity of Legislation in the United States undertook the task of drafting a Negotiable Instruments Law (NIL) for adoption by the legislatures of the various states. The law was finally prepared and recommended by the Commissioners for adoption in 1896, and, by December of 1900, fifteen states had adopted it. In that month, Dean Ames, of the Harvard Law School, loosed a blast at this new law in an article in the Harvard …


Uniformity Of Commercial Law On The American Continent, Roscoe Pound Dec 1909

Uniformity Of Commercial Law On The American Continent, Roscoe Pound

Michigan Law Review

Anglo-American, lawyers are not, as a rule, believers in codification. Hence, as legislation is the only agency through which in practice a uniform commercial law for the American continent may be looked for, you might, with some degree of reason, anticipate that I should be opposed to such a project. I may say, however, that I do not, at all share the orthodox common-law antipathy toward legislation and codification. I have no doubt that a legislative restatement of the law and a juridical new start upon the basis of such a restatement are inevitable in English-speaking countries for the same …