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Articles 1 - 19 of 19
Full-Text Articles in Legal History
Past The Pillars Of Hercules: Francis Bacon And The Science Of Rulemaking, Daniel R. Coquillette
Past The Pillars Of Hercules: Francis Bacon And The Science Of Rulemaking, Daniel R. Coquillette
University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform
The parallels between Bacon's career and that of Edward H. Cooper are, of course, obvious. Bacon was one of the great legal minds of his day. Unlike the common-law judges who formed the law by deciding cases, Bacon expressed his greatness in writing brilliant juristic treatises and, as Lord Chancellor, drafting one of the first modern rule systems, the Ordinances in Chancery (1617-1620). Indeed, my thesis is that Bacon invented modern, scientific rulemaking by fusing his new theories of inductive, empirical research with the traditions of equitable pleading and is, in fact, the intellectual forbearer of the likes of Charles …
Roman Law As A Political Agenda, Mathias Reimann
Roman Law As A Political Agenda, Mathias Reimann
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Legacy of Roman Law in the German Romantic Era by James Q. Whitman
The Birth Of The Legal Profession, Alan Watson
The Birth Of The Legal Profession, Alan Watson
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Rise of the Roman Jurists: Studies in Cicero's Pro Caecina by Bruce W. Frier
Law, Society, And Reception: The Vision Of Alan Watson, M. H. Hoeflich
Law, Society, And Reception: The Vision Of Alan Watson, M. H. Hoeflich
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Evolution of Law by Alan Watson
Law On The Installment Plan, Bruce W. Frier
Law On The Installment Plan, Bruce W. Frier
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Ulpian by Tony Honoré
Roman Law Influence On The Civil Law, Charles Donahue Jr.
Roman Law Influence On The Civil Law, Charles Donahue Jr.
Michigan Law Review
A Review of The Making of the Civil Law by Alan Watson
Toward A New Theory Of Roman Law, David F. Pugsley
Toward A New Theory Of Roman Law, David F. Pugsley
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Landlords and Tenants in Imperial Rome by Bruce W. Frier
Roman Canon Law In The Medieval English Church: Stubbs Vs. Maitland Re-Examined After 75 Years In The Light Of Some Records From The Church Courts, Charles Donahue Jr.
Roman Canon Law In The Medieval English Church: Stubbs Vs. Maitland Re-Examined After 75 Years In The Light Of Some Records From The Church Courts, Charles Donahue Jr.
Michigan Law Review
The Right Reverend William Stubbs, D.D. (1825-1901), was the Anglican Bishop of Oxford, sometime Regius Professor of Modern History at Oxford, and a scholar of considerable repute. His Constitutional History of England was, until quite recently, the standard work in the field, and his editions of texts for the Rolls Series leave no doubt that he spent long hours ·with basic source material. Frederic William Maitland, M.A. (1850-1906), was an agnostic, the Downing Professor of the Laws of England at Cambridge, and a scholar whose reputation during his life was perhaps not so wide as Stubbs' but whose work commanded …
Schiller: An American Experience In Roman Law, Charles Donahue Jr.
Schiller: An American Experience In Roman Law, Charles Donahue Jr.
Michigan Law Review
A Review of An American Experience in Roman Law by A. Arthur Schiller
The Lex Fori - Basic Rule In The Conflict Of Laws, Albert A. Ehrenzweig
The Lex Fori - Basic Rule In The Conflict Of Laws, Albert A. Ehrenzweig
Michigan Law Review
The following summary of this thesis will show its essential connection with the progressing reform of the law of jurisdiction.
Specific Performance In France And Germany, John P. Dawson
Specific Performance In France And Germany, John P. Dawson
Michigan Law Review
Edgar Durfee studied long and closely the subject of specific performance. He taught it for many years, wrote about it and planned to ·write more. He conceived it broadly, as he did every subject that ever had his attention, but he had a lively interest in details, including very technical details. Long before others and much more than most, he saw the importance of our remedial system both in shaping law and as a reflection of its larger purposes. All those who learned from him will remember as long as memory lasts the insight he gave and the hidden meanings …
Compelling The Testimony Of Political Deviants, O. John Rogge
Compelling The Testimony Of Political Deviants, O. John Rogge
Michigan Law Review
Besides the two specific problems which the new federal act presents, namely, whether it imposes nonjudicial functions on federal courts, and whether it should, does and can protect against the substantial danger of state prosecution, there is a general objection that one can raise against it, and to other acts of the same type: they relate to the area of belief and opinion, the very area which was involved when the English people, spearheaded by the Puritans, engaged in the struggle with the Crown that finally resulted in the establishment of a right of silence. At least if we are …
Lawson: A Common Lawyer Looks At The Civil Law, F. S. C. Northrop
Lawson: A Common Lawyer Looks At The Civil Law, F. S. C. Northrop
Michigan Law Review
A Review of A Common Lawyer Looks at the Civil Law. By F. H. Lawson.
Just War-A Legal Concept?, Arthur Nussbaum
Just War-A Legal Concept?, Arthur Nussbaum
Michigan Law Review
During the century preceding the First World War the topic of "just war," frequently and intensely treated in earlier periods, had almost disappeared from the writings on international relations. Since the end of the war, however, the issue has been revived by writers within and without the legal profession. The present article purports, principally by an inquiry into its historical background, to determine its legal relevance.
Review: The Revival Of Natural Law Concepts, Fowler Vincent Harper
Review: The Revival Of Natural Law Concepts, Fowler Vincent Harper
Michigan Law Review
A Book Review of THE REVIVAL OF NATURAL LAW CONCEPTS By Charles Grove Haines.
Divorce - Recrimination As A Defense
Divorce - Recrimination As A Defense
Michigan Law Review
If both parties have a right to divorce, neither party has. This judicial pronouncement, paradoxical and puzzling as it must seem, at least to the lay mind, nevertheless embodies the kernel of the doctrine of recrimination as it is applied in divorce cases by modem courts. One party seeks divorce and proves beyond doubt that he or she is entitled to relief. But, if it is found that the complaining party too, is guilty of conduct for which a divorce may be granted, the court turns a deaf ear to both. For, in the oft quoted words of Chancellor Wallworth, …
Imprisonment For Debt, Richard Ford
Imprisonment For Debt, Richard Ford
Michigan Law Review
Imprisonment for debt is usually thought of as a barbarous custom which declined continuously as civilization and Christianity advanced and which was totally done away with long ago. The facts, however, are otherwise. It seems doubtful if history warrants any generalization to the effect that the imprisonment of debtors has been a steadily declining practice. Certain it is, that in a greater or less degree it exists today in many parts of the United States, in England, and in some other countries. Moreover, creditors are making use of it on a comparatively large scale. It is the purpose of this …
Book Reviews, Robert T. Crane, Edwin D. Dickinson, Grover C. Grismore, Henry M. Bates, Joseph H. Drake
Book Reviews, Robert T. Crane, Edwin D. Dickinson, Grover C. Grismore, Henry M. Bates, Joseph H. Drake
Michigan Law Review
Among all the writings that have appeared on the problem of preserving the order of world society, the most searching and the most illuminating is Hart's Bulwarks of Peace. Particularly in connection with any consideration of the plan of the Paris Covenant of the League of Nations, it compellingly arrests attention.
Book Reviews, Edwin D. Dickinson
Book Reviews, Edwin D. Dickinson
Michigan Law Review
The collaboration in a literary and scholarly enterprise of Mr. Thomas Erskine Holland as editor, Mr. James L. Brierly as translator, and the Oxfor University Press as publisher was certain to produce a work of superior merit. They have in all respects outdone themselves in their sumptuous edition of Legnano's TRLACTATUS in the Classics of International Law. The volume contains a collotype of an early manuscript, a reproduction of the first edition, a revised Latin text, an English translation by Mr. Brierly, and an excellent biographical and bibliographical introduction by Mr. Holland. The editing has been done throughout with Mr. …