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Legal History

Scholarly Works

University of Georgia School of Law

2002

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Intervention In Roman Law: A Case Study In The Hazards Of Legal Scholarship, Peter A. Appel Jan 2002

Intervention In Roman Law: A Case Study In The Hazards Of Legal Scholarship, Peter A. Appel

Scholarly Works

In this Article, I offer a case study of one of the hazards presented by legal scholarship in law reviews as it has evolved over the last century. The standard law review article typically begins with an overview of the author's subject, frequently involving a historical perspective or a chronology of the development of a doctrine. This background section stems from a number of causes, but many attribute it to the fact that most law reviews are student-edited. In order to evaluate an author's argument, students need a brief course in, say, the basics of trade law and pollution control …


Dissenting Opinions: In The Georgia Supreme Court, R. Perry Sentell Jr. Jan 2002

Dissenting Opinions: In The Georgia Supreme Court, R. Perry Sentell Jr.

Scholarly Works

Under our system of justice, each jurisdiction necessarily evolves its own distinct tradition of judicial dissent. That evolution's impetus, history, pattern, and results all converge in an informative profile--affording yet another means of studying a state's highest appellate court. A dissent profile of the Georgia Supreme Court thus offers an additional evaluative view of the state's most important judicial cathedral.