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Canada's Legal Pasts presents new essays on a range of topics and
episodes in Canadian legal history, provides an introduction to
legal methodologies, shows researchers new to the field how to
locate and use a variety of sources, and includes a combined
bibliography arranged to demonstrate best practices in gathering
and listing primary sources. It is an essential welcome for
scholars who wish to learn about Canada's legal pasts-and why we
study them.Telling new stories-about a fishing vessel that became
the subject of an extraordinarily long diplomatic dispute, young
Northwest Mounted Police constables subject to an odd mixture of
police discipline and criminal procedure, and more-this book
presents the vibrant evolution of Canada's legal tradition.
Explorations of primary sources, including provincial archival
records that suggest how Quebec courts have been used in
interfamilial conflict, newspaper records that disclose the details
of bigamy cases, and penitentiary records that reveal the details
of the lives and legal entanglements of Canada's most marginalized
people, show the many different ways of researching and
understanding legal history. This is Canadian legal history as
you've never seen it before. Canada's Legal Pasts dives into new
topics in Canada's fascinating history and presents practical
approaches to legal scholarship, bringing together established and
emerging scholars in collection essential for researchers at all
levels.
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Animal Ethics and Animal Law (Hardcover)
Andrew Linzey; Contributions by A W H Bates, Mariah Rayfield Beck, Alice Collinson, Danielle Duffield, …
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R2,596
Discovery Miles 25 960
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Animal law is a growing discipline, as is animal ethics. In this
wide-ranging book, scholars from around the world address the
intersections between the two. Specifically, this collection
focuses on pressing moral issues and how law can protect animals
from cruelty and abuse. A project of the Oxford Centre for Animal
Ethics, the book is edited by the Oxford Centre's directors, Andrew
Linzey and Clair Linzey, and features contributions from many of
its fellows. Divided into three sections, the work explores
historical perspectives and ethical-legal issues such as
"personhood" and "property" before focusing on five practical case
studies. The volume introduces readers to the interweaving between
these subjects and should act as a spur to further
interdisciplinary work.
This collection of new essays by scholars from across Europe
focuses on the key theoretical and historical questions within the
rapidly growing field of Iberian studies, which is taken by the
authors to mean the methodological consideration of the Iberian
peninsula as a complex and multilingual cultural and literary
system. Dealing with a wide range of issues and cultural output
from a comparative European perspective, the essays question the
concept of 'Iberian' itself, query its suitability as a starting
point for academic research and consider it in relation to other
more established concepts and identities, such as Spanish,
Portuguese, Catalan, Basque and Galician, as well as wider European
and Western identities. The contributors examine the relationship
between the reality of 'Iberia' and the mythical, historical and
artistic narratives created to support or represent this collective
identity, with a particular focus on the period from the nineteenth
century to the present day.
'Law Books in Action: Essays on the Anglo-American Legal Treatise'
explores the history of the legal treatise in the common law world.
Rather than looking at treatises as shortcuts from 'law in books'
to 'law in action', the essays in this collection ask what
treatises can tell us about what troubled legal professionals at a
given time, what motivated them to write what they did, and what
they hoped to achieve. This book, then, is the first study of the
legal treatise as a 'law book in action', an active text produced
by individuals with ideas about what they wanted the law to be, not
a mere stepping-stone to codes and other forms of legal writing,
but a multifaceted genre of legal literature in its own right,
practical and fanciful, dogmatic and ornamental in turn. This book
will be of interest to legal scholars, lawyers and judges, as well
as to anyone else with a scholarly interest in law in general, and
legal history in particular.
The 1805 New York foxhunting case Pierson v. Post has long been
used in American property law classrooms to introduce law students
to the concept of first possession by asking how one establishes
possession of a wild animal. In this book, Angela Fernandez retells
the history of the famous fox case, from its origins as a squabble
between two wealthy young men on the South Fork of Long Island
through its appeal to the New York Supreme Court and entry into
legal treatises, law school casebooks, and law journal articles,
where it still occupies a central place. Fernandez argues that the
dissent is best understood as an example of legal solemn foolery.
Yet it has been treated by legal professionals, the lawyers of its
day, and subsequent legal academics in such a serious way,
demonstrating how the solemn and the silly can occupy two sides of
the same coin in American legal history.
The 1805 New York foxhunting case Pierson v. Post has long been
used in American property law classrooms to introduce law students
to the concept of first possession by asking how one establishes
possession of a wild animal. In this book, Angela Fernandez retells
the history of the famous fox case, from its origins as a squabble
between two wealthy young men on the South Fork of Long Island
through its appeal to the New York Supreme Court and entry into
legal treatises, law school casebooks, and law journal articles,
where it still occupies a central place. Fernandez argues that the
dissent is best understood as an example of legal solemn foolery.
Yet it has been treated by legal professionals, the lawyers of its
day, and subsequent legal academics in such a serious way,
demonstrating how the solemn and the silly can occupy two sides of
the same coin in American legal history.
Canada's Legal Pasts presents new essays on a range of topics and
episodes in Canadian legal history, provides an introduction to
legal methodologies, shows researchers new to the field how to
locate and use a variety of sources, and includes a combined
bibliography arranged to demonstrate best practices in gathering
and listing primary sources. It is an essential welcome for
scholars who wish to learn about Canada's legal pasts-and why we
study them. Telling new stories-about a fishing vessel that became
the subject of an extraordinarily long diplomatic dispute, young
Northwest Mounted Police constables subject to an odd mixture of
police discipline and criminal procedure, and more-this book
presents the vibrant evolution of Canada's legal tradition.
Explorations of primary sources, including provincial archive
records that suggest how Quebec courts have been used in
interfamilial conflict, newspaper records that disclose the details
of bigamy cases, and penitentiary records that reveal the details
of the lives and legal entanglements of Canada's most marginalized
people, show the many different ways of researching and
understanding legal history. This is Canadian legal history as
you've never seen it before. Canada's Legal Pasts dives into new
topics in Canada's fascinating history and presents practical
approaches to legal scholarship, bringing together established and
emerging scholars in collection essential for researchers at all
levels.
Iberian and Translation Studies: Literary Contact Zones offers
fertile reflection on the dynamics of linguistic diversity and
multifaceted literary translation flows taking place across the
Iberian Peninsula. Drawing on cutting-edge theoretical perspectives
and on a historically diverse body of case studies, the volume's
sixteen chapters explore the key role of translation in shaping
interliterary relations and cultural identities within Iberia. Mary
Louise Pratt's contact zone metaphor is used as an overarching
concept to approach Iberia as a translation(al) space where
languages and cultural systems (Basque, Catalan, Galician,
Portuguese, and Spanish) set up relationships either of conflict,
coercion, and resistance or of collaboration, hospitality, and
solidarity. In bringing together a variety of essays by
multilingual scholars whose conceptual and empirical research
places itself at the intersection of translation and literary
Iberian studies, the book opens up a new interdisciplinary field of
enquiry: Iberian translation studies. This allows for a renewed
study of canonical authors such as Joan Maragall, Fernando Pessoa,
Camilo Jose Cela, and Bernardo Atxaga, and calls attention to
emerging bilingual contemporary voices. In addition to addressing
understudied genres (the entremez and the picaresque novel) and the
phenomena of self-translation, indirect translation, and
collaborative translation, the book provides fresh insights into
Iberian cultural agents, mediators, and institutions.
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