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Articles 61 - 84 of 84

Full-Text Articles in Law

Deconstruction And Legal Interpretation: Conflict, Indeterminacy And The Temptations Of The New Legal Formalism, Michel Rosenfeld Jan 1990

Deconstruction And Legal Interpretation: Conflict, Indeterminacy And The Temptations Of The New Legal Formalism, Michel Rosenfeld

Articles

No abstract provided.


Not Beyond Justice: A Reply To Heller And Eisele, Arthur J. Jacobson Jan 1990

Not Beyond Justice: A Reply To Heller And Eisele, Arthur J. Jacobson

Articles

No abstract provided.


The Idolatry Of Rules: Writing Law According To Moses, With Reference To Other Jurisprudences, Arthur J. Jacobson Jan 1990

The Idolatry Of Rules: Writing Law According To Moses, With Reference To Other Jurisprudences, Arthur J. Jacobson

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No abstract provided.


Hegel’S Answers To Questions We Know Not How To Ask, J. David Bleich Jan 1989

Hegel’S Answers To Questions We Know Not How To Ask, J. David Bleich

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No abstract provided.


Hegel's Legal Plenum, Arthur J. Jacobson Jan 1989

Hegel's Legal Plenum, Arthur J. Jacobson

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No abstract provided.


Hegel And The Dialectics Of Contract, Michel Rosenfeld Jan 1989

Hegel And The Dialectics Of Contract, Michel Rosenfeld

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No abstract provided.


Reaction To Terrorism: A Jewish Law Caveat, J. David Bleich Jan 1989

Reaction To Terrorism: A Jewish Law Caveat, J. David Bleich

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No abstract provided.


Where Guesses Come From: Evolutionary Epistemology And The Anomaly Of Guided Variation, Edward Stein Jan 1989

Where Guesses Come From: Evolutionary Epistemology And The Anomaly Of Guided Variation, Edward Stein

Articles

No abstract provided.


Justice Brennan, The Constitution, And Modern American Liberalism, David Rudenstine Jan 1988

Justice Brennan, The Constitution, And Modern American Liberalism, David Rudenstine

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No abstract provided.


Judicial Process As An Empirical Study: A Comment On Justice Brennan’S Essay, Charles M. Yablon Jan 1988

Judicial Process As An Empirical Study: A Comment On Justice Brennan’S Essay, Charles M. Yablon

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No abstract provided.


Judicial Discretion, Or The Self On The Shelf, Richard H. Weisberg Jan 1988

Judicial Discretion, Or The Self On The Shelf, Richard H. Weisberg

Articles

No abstract provided.


Making Sense Of Modern Jurisprudence: The Paradox Of Positivism And The Challenge For Natural Law, Philip E. Soper Jan 1988

Making Sense Of Modern Jurisprudence: The Paradox Of Positivism And The Challenge For Natural Law, Philip E. Soper

Articles

Karl Llewellyn once said, referring to Roscoe Pound's work m jurisprudence, that it was difficult to tell on what level the writing proceeded: sometimes it seemed to be little more than bedtime stones for a tired bar; at other tunes it appeared to be on the level of the after-dinner speech or a thought provoking essay, neither of which were quite the "considered and buttressed scholarly discussion" that one expected to find. Llewellyn's complaint serves as a warning, though a somewhat ambiguous one, to those who give lectures on jurisprudence.

On the one hand, I do not plan to present …


Is Fraudulent Conveyance Law Efficient?, David G. Carlson Dec 1987

Is Fraudulent Conveyance Law Efficient?, David G. Carlson

Articles

No abstract provided.


Reforming The Efficiency Criterion: Comments On Some Recent Suggestions, David G. Carlson Jan 1986

Reforming The Efficiency Criterion: Comments On Some Recent Suggestions, David G. Carlson

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No abstract provided.


Historical Aspects Of Legal Interpretation, Peter Goodrich Jan 1986

Historical Aspects Of Legal Interpretation, Peter Goodrich

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No abstract provided.


Alternative Methodologies In Contemporary Jurisprudence: Comments On Dworkin, Philip E. Soper Jan 1986

Alternative Methodologies In Contemporary Jurisprudence: Comments On Dworkin, Philip E. Soper

Articles

I have two brief points to make. Both involve recent developments in jurisprudence, by which I mean by and large the subject that Ronald Dworkin has just been discussing. Indeed, the first point is little more than an acknowledgement of the debt that is owed to Dworkin, not only for his specific contributions to this field, but for the implications of his work for law teaching generally.


The Indeterminacy Of The Law: Critical Legal Studies And The Problem Of Legal Explanation, Charles M. Yablon Jan 1985

The Indeterminacy Of The Law: Critical Legal Studies And The Problem Of Legal Explanation, Charles M. Yablon

Articles

No abstract provided.


Modern American Jurisprudence And The Problem Of Power, Arthur J. Jacobson Jan 1985

Modern American Jurisprudence And The Problem Of Power, Arthur J. Jacobson

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No abstract provided.


Law And Language: An Historical And Critical Introduction, Peter Goodrich Jan 1984

Law And Language: An Historical And Critical Introduction, Peter Goodrich

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No abstract provided.


A Response To Fish And White, Richard H. Weisberg Jan 1984

A Response To Fish And White, Richard H. Weisberg

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No abstract provided.


The Persistence Of Classical Style, Patrick O. Gudridge Jan 1983

The Persistence Of Classical Style, Patrick O. Gudridge

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No abstract provided.


Capturing Fiduciary Obligation: Shepherd's Law Of Fiduciaries, Arthur J. Jacobson Apr 1982

Capturing Fiduciary Obligation: Shepherd's Law Of Fiduciaries, Arthur J. Jacobson

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No abstract provided.


Jurisprudence And The Study Of Cases, Joseph H. Drake Jan 1920

Jurisprudence And The Study Of Cases, Joseph H. Drake

Articles

Following the suggestion of our Chairman, we have apparently agreed to assume that under the theme of jurisprudence we are to include all of the abstract, nonutilitarian subjects bearing upon the subject of law. Whether we call it a historical science, a science of sciences, or a philosophy, we all believe that it Is a valuable body of rapidly increasing knowledge, and our purpose now is to determine the methodological question as to how it can be made available for our undergraduate students in the law school.


The Right Of A Bona Fide Occupant Of Land To Compensation For His Improvements, Henry W. Rogers Dec 1882

The Right Of A Bona Fide Occupant Of Land To Compensation For His Improvements, Henry W. Rogers

Articles

It may be observed, in the first place, that the civil law afforded protection to the bona fide occupant of land, who had made useful or permanent improvements on the land, believing himself to be the true owner. The civil law never permitted one who was in the possession of land in good faith, to be turned out of his possession by the rightful owner, without any compensation for the additional value he has given to the soil by the improvements he had made; but it allowed him to offset the value of his improvements to the extent, at least, …