Gale Encyclopedia of American Law, 3rd Edition, Volume 9: SAR to TEN
This new edition, which replaces West's Encyclopedia of American Law, provides: -Current information on 5,000 legal topics in 14 volumes cover important issues -More than 60 brand-new entries and 2,000 revised articles -Biographies of interesting and influential people who have played a part in creating or shaping U.S. law, along with a portrait, a timeline and a quote from the biographee -Increased coverage of women and minorities -Definitions of legal terms
Edited by Bryan A. Garner, the world’s leading legal lexicographer, Black’s Law Dictionary, 8th Edition is now better than ever! The new 8th Edition has more than 43,000 definitions, plus almost 3,000 quotations. Alternative spellings or equivalent terms and exions are pred for more than 5,300 terms and senses, serving a thesaurus-like function. The extensive appendix on legal abbreviations is a major addition. It’s the first time such a comprehensive guide has been included in a modern law dictionary, and is an invaluable aid to the legal researcher.
Gale Encyclopedia of American Law, 3rd Edition, Volume 13: Primary Documents
This new edition, which replaces West's Encyclopedia of American Law, provides: -Current information on 5,000 legal topics in 14 volumes cover important issues -More than 60 brand-new entries and 2,000 revised articles -Biographies of interesting and influential people who have played a part in creating or shaping U.S. law, along with a portrait, a timeline and a quote from the biographee -Increased coverage of women and minorities -Definitions of legal terms
Published in 1797, the Doctrine of Right is Kant's most significant contribution to legal and political philosophy. As the first part of the Metaphysics of Morals, it deals with the legal rights which persons have or can acquire, and aims at providing the grounding for lasting international peace through the idea of the juridical state (Rechtsstaat). This commentary analyzes Kant's system of individual rights, starting from the original innate right to external freedom, and ending with the right to own property and to have contractual and family claims.
Law's Cosmos: Juridical Discourse in Athenian Forensic Oratory
Recent literary-critical work in legal studies reads law as a genre of literature, noting that Western law originated as a branch of rhetoric in classical Greece and lamenting the fact that the law has lost its connection to poetic language, narrative, and imagination. But modern legal scholarship has paid little attention to the actual juridical discourse of ancient Greece.