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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Trial Of The Argentine Junta: Responsibilities And Realities, Paula K. Speck
The Trial Of The Argentine Junta: Responsibilities And Realities, Paula K. Speck
University of Miami Inter-American Law Review
No abstract provided.
Antitrust Law In The European Community And The United States: A Comparative Analysis, Gabriele Dara
Antitrust Law In The European Community And The United States: A Comparative Analysis, Gabriele Dara
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
Land Title Registration: An English Solution To An American Problem, C. Dent Bostick
Land Title Registration: An English Solution To An American Problem, C. Dent Bostick
Indiana Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Who May Leave: A Review Of Soviet Practice Restricting Emigration On Grounds Of Knowledge Of "State Secrets" In Comparison With Standards Of International Law And The Policies Of Other States, Jeffrey Barist, Owen C. Pell, Eugenia Oshman, Matthew E. Hamel
Who May Leave: A Review Of Soviet Practice Restricting Emigration On Grounds Of Knowledge Of "State Secrets" In Comparison With Standards Of International Law And The Policies Of Other States, Jeffrey Barist, Owen C. Pell, Eugenia Oshman, Matthew E. Hamel
Hofstra Law Review
No abstract provided.
A Government By Judges: An Historical Re-View, Michael Henry Davis
A Government By Judges: An Historical Re-View, Michael Henry Davis
Law Faculty Articles and Essays
In 1921, Edouard Lambert, a professor of law at Lyon specializing in comparative studies and founder of an Institute of Comparative Law there, published a book, Le Gouvernement des judges et la lutte contra la legislation sociale aux Etats-Unis, thus singlehandedly creating the phrase, a "government of judges", to denote a truly unconstrained system of judicial review which could not be limited even by constitutional amendment. The phrase quickly entered the parlance of French public law and even that of popular culture, deriving much of its force, no doubt, from the historical French aversion to a strong judiciary, eventually becoming …
The Universal And The Particular In Legal Discourses, George P. Fletcher
The Universal And The Particular In Legal Discourses, George P. Fletcher
Faculty Scholarship
My target in this article is a set of views that I shall call the functionalist perspective of comparative law. Of course, the word "functionalist" stands for a number of different theories. In order to be precise about the view that I oppose, I shall set my sights on the arguments developed in Otto Kahn-Freund's inaugural lecture Comparative Law as an Academic Subject, published two decades ago.