Listing 1 - 10 of 245 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American
Choose an application
Law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American
Choose an application
Justice, Administration of --- Law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American
Choose an application
Common law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American --- Customary law
Choose an application
Law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American --- Law - United States
Choose an application
Since the 1980s, the Senior Law Lord has contributed to publications and conferences on a range of legally related topics. This book contains a selection of these contributions.
Judicial process --- Law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American
Choose an application
A collection of cases in common law, centred upon the theme of the judgment establishing a long-lasting or far-reaching precedent. The cases were selected in order to illustrate how the precedents established had little or nothing to do with the trials themselves.
Common law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American --- Customary law
Choose an application
The concept of common law has been one of the most important conceptual instruments of the western legal tradition, but has been neglected by legal theory and legal history for the last two centuries. This text analyses the history and importance of common laws.
Common law. --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American --- Customary law
Choose an application
Law --- Droit --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American
Choose an application
Problems of constitutional interpretation have many faces, but much of the contemporary discussion has focused on what has come to be called "originalism." The core of originalism is the belief that fidelity to the original understanding of the Constitution should constrain contemporary judges. As originalist thinking has evolved, it has become clear that there is a family of originalist theories, some emphasizing the intent of the framers, while others focus on the original public meaning of the constitutional text. This idea has enjoyed a modern resurgence, in good part in reaction to the assumption of more sweeping power by the judiciary, operating in the name of constitutional interpretation. Those arguing for a "living Constitution" that keeps up with a changing world and changing values have resisted originalism. This difference in legal philosophy and jurisprudence has, since the 1970's, spilled over into party politics and the partisan wrangling over court appointments from appellate courts to the Supreme Court. In Constitutional Originalism, Robert W. Bennett and Lawrence B. Solum elucidate the two sides of this debate and mediate between them in order to separate differences that are real from those that are only apparent. In a thorough exploration of the range of contemporary views on originalism, the authors articulate and defend sharply contrasting positions. Solum brings learning from the philosophy of language to his argument in favor of originalism, and Bennett highlights interpretational problems in the dispute-resolution context, describing instances in which a living Constitution is a more feasible and productive position. The book explores those contrasting positions, to be sure, but also uncovers important points of agreement for the interpretational enterprise. This provocative and absorbing book ends with a bibliographic essay that points to landmark works in the field and helps lay readers and students orient themselves within the literature of the debate.
Constitutional law --- Law --- Anglo-American law --- Law, Anglo-American
Listing 1 - 10 of 245 | << page >> |
Sort by
|