The American Journal of Legal
History published its December 2020 issue several weeks ago.
Articles
The Anti-Republican Origins of
the At-Will Doctrine
Lea VanderVelde 397
Capturing Profit from Disaster:
The Assets Company Ltd and the Afterlife
of the City of Glasgow Bank
Sean O’Reilly 450
Where Did ‘Human Dignity’ Come
from? Drafting the Preamble to the
Irish Constitution
Christopher McCrudden 485
From Disputation Hall to High
Office: Swedish Students’ Legal
Dissertations at German and Dutch
Universities in the Seventeenth and
Eighteenth Centuries
Marianne Vasara-Aaltonen 536
Book Reviews
The Historical Logics of Work
Accident Law: Nate Holdren, Injury
Impoverished: Workplace
Accidents, Capitalism, and the Law in the
Progressive Era
John Fabian Witt 564
Thomas J. McSweeney, Priests of
the Law: Roman Law and the Making of
the Common Law’s First
Professionals
John Hudson 574
Michael A. Schoeppner, Moral
Contagion: Black Atlantic Sailors,
Citizenship, and Diplomacy in
Antebellum America
Andrew Hammann 576
Emily Whewell, Law Across
Imperial Borders: British Consuls and Colonial
Connections on China’s Western
Frontiers, 1880–1943
Eric Schluessel 578
Leandra Ruth Zarnow, Battling
Bella: The Protest Politics of Bella Abzug
Alison Lefkovitz 580
Mary Ziegler, Abortion and the
Law in America: Roe v. Wade to the Present
Karissa Haugeberg 582
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