Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Discipline
- Keyword
-
- English law (3)
- Administrative powers (1)
- Appellate courts (1)
- Architects (1)
- Aviation law (1)
-
- Cartels (1)
- Court of appeal (1)
- Divorce (1)
- Engineers (1)
- Equity (1)
- Fascism (1)
- Federal Antitrust Law (1)
- Fines (1)
- Foreign governments (1)
- Fraud (1)
- French law (1)
- History writing (1)
- Interception of goods (1)
- Italy (1)
- Louisiana (1)
- Magistratura del lavoro (1)
- Marginal seas (1)
- Marriage (1)
- Nationalization (1)
- New Zealand (1)
- Piedpoudre courts (1)
- Pittsburgh (1)
- Plea Rolls (1)
- Price manipulation (1)
- Proceedings in error (1)
Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Comparative and Foreign Law
The Italian Magistracy Of Labour A Fascist Experiment, Leonard Manyon
The Italian Magistracy Of Labour A Fascist Experiment, Leonard Manyon
Michigan Law Review
The legislators of Fascist Italy, although they vigorously affirm the unprecedented and original character of their achievement, do not despise history--or even pre-history--as a measure of that achievement. In the social and economic no less than in the political sphere, they claim the merit of vast innovations, whose true significance, they tell us, can be gauged only by surveying, across the course of centuries, the evolution of human civilization.
The Immunity Of Foreign States When Engaged In Commercial Enterprises: A Proposed Solution, John G. Hervey
The Immunity Of Foreign States When Engaged In Commercial Enterprises: A Proposed Solution, John G. Hervey
Michigan Law Review
Do governments which engage in commercial undertakings assume the civil and criminal liabilities imposed upon private corporations engaged in similar enterprises, or do governments confer sovereign privileges upon their undertakings? Can governments engage in commercial enterprises and thereby escape the liabilities imposed upon private individuals? More particularly, are foreign governments engaged in such undertakings exempt from process in the American courts?
The Fifteenth Century-The Dark Age In Legal History, Joseph F. Francis
The Fifteenth Century-The Dark Age In Legal History, Joseph F. Francis
Michigan Law Review
Everywhere during the last few decades there has been a revolution in the thinking of educated men. I refer to the revolution in logical method and thought that had its impetus first in the non-Euclidian mathematicians. was then carried on by the logicians and philosophers and finally culminated in the startling conclusions announced by Einstein. This revolution has been an attack on absolutism and on the metaphysical nonentities that pervade all man's learning. The attack is not new, it is only new in vigor, in scope, and in promise.
Forestalling, Regrating And Engrossing, Wendell Herbruck
Forestalling, Regrating And Engrossing, Wendell Herbruck
Michigan Law Review
The earliest attempts in English Law to regulate trade are to be found in the enactments against forestalling, regrating and engrossing and in them, it has been asserted, is the basis of our modern legislation against monopolies and combinations in restraint of trade. Aside, however, from the mention that is occasionally made of these crimes in connection with the history of the laws of trade, the words as a part of legal terminology are almost obsolete, although the word "forestalling" is used to define a crime punishable under the laws of Ohio and doubtless is to be found in other …
The Scope Of Judicial Review, Edson R. Sunderland
The Scope Of Judicial Review, Edson R. Sunderland
Michigan Law Review
There was nothing known to the common law which was, or could properly be called, a true appeal from one court to another, and this was so in England until the judicature act of 1873. There were, however, certain imperfect and restricted methods by which some sort of redress could be had for an unjust decision.