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Full-Text Articles in Law
Revolution In The Balance: Law And Society In Contemporary Cuba, Eugene Whitlock
Revolution In The Balance: Law And Society In Contemporary Cuba, Eugene Whitlock
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Revolution in the Balance: Law and Society in Contemporary Cuba by Debra Evenson
Administering Justice In A Consensus-Based Society, Koichiro Fujikura
Administering Justice In A Consensus-Based Society, Koichiro Fujikura
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Authority Without Power: Law and the Japanese Paradox by John O. Haley
The Servants, Stephan Landsman
The Servants, Stephan Landsman
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Barristers' Clerks, the Law's Middlemen by John Flood
Socialism And Federation, John N. Hazard
Socialism And Federation, John N. Hazard
Michigan Law Review
Federal structures are often established by national founders to manage intractable problems created over generations, if not centuries, by the migration of peoples. Military and economic pressures may stimulate union to assure survival, but ethnic, racial or religious tensions sometimes hamper draftsmen who sense the need for unity. Federation has often been the modem solution to the conflict between the need for unity and the desire for autonomy felt by groups fearing the loss of identity.
Socialist Federation--A Legal Means To The Solution Of The Nationality Problem: A Comparative Study, Viktor Knapp
Socialist Federation--A Legal Means To The Solution Of The Nationality Problem: A Comparative Study, Viktor Knapp
Michigan Law Review
The history of federations is both long and short. It is long in that the federation originated with the Swiss Confederation, which dates back to the 1291 defense confederacy of the cantons of Uri, Schwyz and Unterwalden; it is short because the second federation in world history, one that has become a model for many others, did not come into being until almost five centuries later in America.
A Comparative Perspective On Legal Evolution, Revolution, And Devolution, Laura Nader
A Comparative Perspective On Legal Evolution, Revolution, And Devolution, Laura Nader
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Courts--A Comparative and Political Analysis by Martin Shapiro, and Lawsuits and Litigants in Castile, 1500-1700 by Richard L. Kagan
South Africa: Using The Law To Establish And Maintain A Pigmentocracy, Rex S. Heinke
South Africa: Using The Law To Establish And Maintain A Pigmentocracy, Rex S. Heinke
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Human Rights and the South African Legal Order by John Dugard
A Significant Contribution To The Literature Of Comparative Law, Arthur T. Von Mehren
A Significant Contribution To The Literature Of Comparative Law, Arthur T. Von Mehren
Michigan Law Review
A Review of An Introduction to Comparative Law: Vol.I, The Framework; Vol. II, The Institutions of Private Law by Konrad Zweigert and Hein Kötz
Max Planck Institute For Comparative Public Law And International Law: Judicial Protection Against The Executive, Pieter Van Dijk
Max Planck Institute For Comparative Public Law And International Law: Judicial Protection Against The Executive, Pieter Van Dijk
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Judicial Protection Against the Executive Edited by the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law
An American Lawyer In The Queen's Courts: Impressions Of English Civil Procedure, Benjamin Kaplan
An American Lawyer In The Queen's Courts: Impressions Of English Civil Procedure, Benjamin Kaplan
Michigan Law Review
While the words "English Civil Procedure" in the title of this lecture might suggest that there is a single English system, there are in fact a number of them. In the High Court itself, the court of general jurisdiction, a suit in Chancery Division proceeds differently from an action in Queen's Bench Division: the English have made less of a fetish of the "one form of action" than we have. Procedure in the County Courts, the courts for small-debt collection and miscellaneous claims, contrasts with those of the High Court. But Queen's Bench procedure for the staple cases of some …