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26 March 2012

NOTICE: H-Law is searching for a web editor

The following message recently appeared on H-Law:

H-Law is searching for a web editor.

 

H-Law’s webpage is out of date and needs a major overhaul....

Knowledge of HTML is not required but is preferred. Experience working with web-editing programs such as FrontPage or Dreamweaver, as well as FTP transfer programs (to download and upload the webpage from H-Net’s servers), is necessary however.

Content for the webpage will be the joint responsibility of the list moderator and the webpage editor.

The webpage editor will become a full member of the H-Law editorial board, as well as a voting member of H-Staff, the governing body for H-Net, upon certification by H-Net.

Graduate students are encouraged to apply.

Interested applicants should send a letter of interest and a CV to zelden@nova.edu. Review of applications will begin in April. The position will remain open until filled.

Charles L Zelden
Acting Lead Moderator

NOTICE: HALPÉRIN (ENOTICE: HALPÉRIN on French Courts and Public Intervention in the Economy During the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries


A number of interesting articles have recently appeared on SSRN

In France the intervention of public power in economic relations has varied considerably at different times: there is little relationship between the mercantilism practiced by Colbert during the reign of Louis XIV and the state capitalism of the Fifth Republic, which itself has changed significantly since 1958. The French economy has never been fully nationalized and since the Revolution French law has protected private property rights and the quasi-constitutional freedom of commerce and industry. Thus, the courts (including administrative tribunals) were able to establish limitations on public intervention deemed excessive. In the nineteenth century, compensation was paid to property owners who suffered damage caused by industries authorized by the government. Under the Third Republic, the Council of State recognized cases of state responsibility for its industrial activities and was very restrictive with regard to municipal socialism by defending private interests in the name of free trade. After the First World War, the courts had to accept the startling increase of state intervention in the economy. It was not until the acceptance of constitutional and treaty-based checks in the 1970s and 1980s that the Constitutional Council and all French courts have found ways to reduce, without eliminating, public intervention in the economic sector. 

Members might look into SSRN's legal history 'e-journal'.