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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Law

The World As Reality, As Resource, And As Pretense, Richard Stith Jan 1975

The World As Reality, As Resource, And As Pretense, Richard Stith

Law Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Recognizing The Needs Of Adopted Persons: A Proposal To Amend The Illinois Adoption Act, Stephen A. Gorman Jan 1975

Recognizing The Needs Of Adopted Persons: A Proposal To Amend The Illinois Adoption Act, Stephen A. Gorman

Loyola University Chicago Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Book Reviews, Joseph J. Norton, L. Harold Levinson Jan 1975

Book Reviews, Joseph J. Norton, L. Harold Levinson

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

When considered as an installment in the unfolding of Friedmann's views, based on his earlier writings, the conclusion to the book under review is to be cherished. When considered, on the other hand, solely in context of the contributed chapters of the same volume, the conclusion does not emerge as Friedmann at his most forceful or persuasive. To find the best of Friedmann, we need only sample his prolific contributions to the law reviews, whether on the United States involvement in the Vietnam conflict, the judgment of the International Court in the South West Africa cases, the risks to humanity …


The Protection Of Respect And Human Rights: Freedom Of Choice And World Public Order, Myers Mcdougal, Harold Lasswell, Lung-Chu Chen Jan 1975

The Protection Of Respect And Human Rights: Freedom Of Choice And World Public Order, Myers Mcdougal, Harold Lasswell, Lung-Chu Chen

Articles & Chapters

No abstract provided.


New York's Right Of Privacy – The Need For Change, Kent Greenawalt Jan 1975

New York's Right Of Privacy – The Need For Change, Kent Greenawalt

Faculty Scholarship

In 1890 Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis wrote a famous article on the right to privacy. Concerned especially with newspaper publications about private and family matters, they urged that courts recognize an explicit right to privacy from unreasonable publicity. According to Warren and Brandeis, certain already recognized rights did in fact protect a person's wish to keep his private thoughts private, though these 1ights were founded on some more traditional legal theories. For example, the privilege of a writer of a letter to bar anyone's publication of the letter had been articulated in decisions as a property right, even when …