(Source: AJLH)
The American Journal of Legal History
published its 3rd issue of the year. Here the table of contents:
Articles
Revisiting the Critiques of Those Who
Upheld the Fugitive Slave Acts in the 1840s and ‘50s
Peter Karsten 291
The Law Wars in Massachusetts, 1830-1860:
How a Band of Upstart Radical Lawyers Defeated the Forces of Law and Order, and
Struck a Blow for Freedom and Equality Under Law
Alexandra D. Lahav and R. Kent Newmyer 326
‘‘O Amherst, Where is Thy Shame?’’: Republican
Opposition to Federalist Policies in a New England Town
Susan J. Siggelakis and Nicholas Mignanelli
360
Judicial Intervention in Early Corporate
Governance Disputes: Vice-Chancellor Shadwell’s Lost Judgment in Mozley v
Alston (1847)
Victoria Barnes 394
Book
Reviews
David Barker, A History of Australian Legal
Education
Mark Lunney 414
Dante Fedele,
Naissance de la diplomatie moderne (XIIIe-XVIIe sie`cles).
L’ambassadeur au
croisement du droit, de l’e´thique et de la politique
Frederik Dhondt 416
Shaunnagh Dorsett, Juridical Encounters:
Maori and the Colonial Courts 1840–1852
Katherine Sanders 418
Guido Rossi, Insurance in Elizabethan
England. The London Code
Dave De ruysscher 420
Mark Lunney, A History of Australian Tort
Law 1901–1945: England’s Obedient Servant?
Henry Kha 423
More information here
No comments:
Post a Comment