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A new take on Holmes' classic study of law and judicial development
of rules. "The life of the law has not been logic: it has been
experience." Annotated throughout with simple clarifications --
decoding and demystifying it for the first time - to make it
accessible to a new generation of readers. Features a 2010 Foreword
and extensive notes by Steven Alan Childress, J.D., Ph.D., a senior
law professor at Tulane. Includes correct footnote numbers and
original page numbers for citing. Contains rare photographs and
insightful biographical section as well. As lamented by Holmes'
premier biographer in 2006, The Common Law "is very likely the
best-known book ever written about American law. But it is a
difficult, sometimes obscure book, which today's lawyers and law
students find largely inaccessible." No longer. With insertions and
simple definitions of the original's language and concepts, this
version makes it live for college students (able to "get it," at
last, with legal terms explained), plus historians, law students,
lawyers, and anyone wanting to understand his great book. No
previous edition of this classic work has offered annotations or
explanatory inserts. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. compiled his master
work in 1881 from lectures on the origins, reasoning, and import of
the common law. It jump-started legal Realism and established law
as a pragmatic way to solve problems and make policy, not just a
bucket of rules. It has stood the test of time as one of the most
important and influential studies of law. This book is interesting
for a vast audience, including historians, students, and political
scientists. It is also a recommended read before law school or in
the 1L year. High quality hardcover edition from Quid Pro's Legal
Legends Series. Holmes (1841-1935) was a legendary Justice of the
U.S. Supreme Court. Before that, he was an influential legal
scholar who brought pragmatism to a new age of legal thought.
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The Right to Privacy (Hardcover)
Samuel D. Warren, Louis D. Brandeis; Foreword by Steven Alan Childress
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R538
Discovery Miles 5 380
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Current important events in the U.S. legal profession and legal
ethics, with useful research and analysis of the rules and the
profession's current status, are analyzed by Tulane law students
from an Advanced Professional Responsibility seminar. The
collection is edited by Tulane legal ethics professor Steven Alan
Childress, and he previews in his Foreword the students'
explorations of the big stories of lawyers and the legal field from
2011. Purchase of this book benefits Tulane's Public Interest Law
Foundation, a nonprofit student group that funds public interest
placements and indigent client representations throughout the
country. The timely topics include: false guilty pleas and candor
to the court, ethical considerations in keeping the client's files
as a digital record, legal outsourcing and competition, the dilemma
of student debt in a slowed legal economy, the practice of law by
legal websites like LegalZoom, the capital defense of Jared Lee
Loughner, Justice Scalia's constitutional seminar for conservative
congressmembers, sensitivity to "cultural competence,"
prosecutorial relationships with key witnesses, bar discipline for
behavior outside the practice of law, negotiation ethics,
hybridized MDL settlements, and the advocate-witness rule. This
book is a detailed and timely follow-up to the 2010 Hot Topics
book, also published in the Benefit Tulane PILF Series by Quid Pro
Books. Its chapters are accessible to lawyers and, not bogged down
with heavy legal jargon, to anyone interested in current topics of
interest about the state of and conflicts in the legal profession
and the justice system.
(Illustrated: Contains extensive images and photographs, with
scholarly explanations, including Holmes's handwritten notes in the
margins of his book and the original admission ticket to his 1880
lectures.) Modern, accurate, and legible edition of the classic
work by Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., analyzing the concept of rules
and the development of common law in the United States and England
over ten centuries. Presented in a clear and affordable format, yet
with original pagination embedded to allow accurate citation or
uniform references for classroom use. Includes photographs and rare
images, Holmes's original Index, Preface and detailed Contents
(features missing in many prior editions), and readable typeface.
Holmes wrote this work from his famous 1880 series of lectures in
Boston on the life of the law, the use of history, and the basics
of torts, contracts, crime, and property law. Law, he wrote, is a
response to the felt necessities of the time. And in the process he
wrote a book that is considered timeless. This modern edition of
the classic book features an explanatory introduction and
biographical summary by Steven Alan Childress, J.D., Ph.D., a
senior law professor at Tulane University.
"The Elementary Forms of the Religious Life" is the classic and
unabridged work on the sociology of religion by one of the founders
of the modern science of sociology-now presented in a quality
centennial edition. Look for the "modern" edition published by
"Quid Pro," showing a "red" cover.] Emile Durkheim examines
religion as a social phenomenon, across time and geographic
boundaries. Some of the most elemental forms of social organization
are analyzed, along with their religious beliefs and practices, to
determine what is fundamental and shared by societies about
religion and faith.
By examining some of the most basic forms of religion,
particularly in aboriginal Australia and native America, and using
a creative sociological and anthropological approach, Durkheim
discovered the core of what separates religion from ritual,
mysticism, science, and mere magic-what makes the soul more than a
spirit. He lays bare the notion that the "primitive" rite, or any
religion, is mainly about fear.
Part of the "Classics of the Social Sciences" Series from Quid
Pro Books, this contemporary republication includes embedded page
numbers from the standard print editions, for continuity of
citations across print platforms and Quid Pro's eBook edition (also
with the red cover). Standard pagination is a very useful feature
for research, classwork, and group assignments.
This work is simply part of the canon of its field (both in
cultural anthropology and in the sociology of religion), and is
presented by Quid Pro in contemporary paperback and eBook formats.
It includes 2012 Notes of the Series Editor, Steven Alan Childress,
Ph.D., J.D., a senior professor of law at Tulane University.
Building on the pragmatic conception of law he introduced in his
1881 book 'The Common Law, ' Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. -- by 1897
a jurist on Massachusetts' highest court and soon to be an
Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court -- explored the limits
and sources of law, as well as "the forces which determine its
content and growth." This presentation is seen as laying down the
gauntlet to legal scholars and judges in what would be known as the
emerging "legal realism" movement. Later legal thinkers like Pound,
Llewellyn and Douglas followed his lead, and that lead is seen most
clearly in this essay. By the time of this pithy and accessible
writing, Holmes had crystallized and clarified that conception of
law which he had, in introducing his earlier book, described in the
famous statement "the life of the law is not logic: it is
experience." Taking that observation to the next level, this essay
made it clear that judges make law, not simply finding it in books
-- and they must draw on practical effects and ends in declaring
legal rules, not simply reasoning from precedent. He does not
hedge: it is a "fallacy" to think that "the only force at work in
the development of the law is logic." More controversially, this
essay makes a powerful distinction between law and morality. Law is
more about what judges do, and how people react to that, than some
lofty sense of ethics, he suggests. But is his figure of the "bad
man" a hero or a cautionary tale? A realistic way to look at law
and social control...or a precursor to Hitler and Stalin?
Dr. Woodrow Wilson's informative, clear, and organized study of the
basic structure and sharing of powers and responsibilities among
governmental units in the United States. Includes explanation from
interesting history--why townships and not counties? why states and
not departments?--while comparing other nations and other eras.
Features original index and bibliography, and a new Foreword by
Steven Alan Childress, J.D., Ph.D., a law professor at Tulane.
Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924) was, famously, the 28th President of the
United States, a wartime Commander-in-Chief, and winner of the 1919
Nobel Peace Prize. Before, he was president of Princeton University
and the governor of New Jersey. Less famously, and earlier still,
he was a practicing lawyer, an accomplished professor of political
science and jurisprudence, and a prolific scholar and popular
author. His books on civics, U.S. history, and presidential
biography were used in classrooms for years. This book in
particular, published in 1889, became the standard for government
classes in several different countries, including the U.S., for
several decades. It still resonates in recounting the early
histories of townships, towns, counties, courts, and states, and
their variant structures and pasts--and in taking local and state
government seriously, while detailing its purposes and variations
across the nation, and not just the more-studied federal government
(though certainly the federal government and its executive are
summarized as well, before he embodied that office). It remains an
interesting read and a useful resource of a history of the first
century of the U.S. and its constitutional framework, and an
examination of the institutions and processes of government after
Reconstruction and into the Progressive Era. The Constitution's
structures and norms are set out, and the sharing of power with
courts and other polities examined. It is a vivid and compelling
snapshot of the United States as a federalist system of powerful
and proud states and localities--at a time when they were
perceived, even after a bloody war to preserve the federal Union,
as independent and functional in their own realms, and not some
convenient geographic subdivision of a singular nation. Accessible
to students or fans of history and government at several levels.
Presented in a modern and clear format with new typeface and clean
presentation (while retaining the original section paragraph]
numbering, for continuity of citations and syllabi); it is not just
photocopied from the small-print 1889 edition, like previous
republishings of this classic work. Part of the quality but
affordable Legal Legends Series of Quid Pro Books.
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The Common Law (Paperback)
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.; Introduction by Steven Alan Childress; Edited by Steven Alan Childress
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R458
Discovery Miles 4 580
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. compiled this master work in 1881 from
his famous lectures in Boston on the origins, reasoning, and import
of the common law. "The life of the law has not been logic: it has
been experience." It jump-started legal realism and established law
as a pragmatic way to solve problems and make policy, not just a
collection of rules. It has stood the test of time as one of the
most important and influential studies of law and the development
of legal rules. This book is interesting for a vast audience, and
considered one of the most original books on U.S. law, for
historians, students, political scientists, and those who follow
the concept of rules. It is also a recommended read before law
school. A new edition of Holmes' classic study of the judicial
development of law. Includes 2010 Foreword by Steven Alan
Childress, J.D., Ph.D., law professor at Tulane. Embeds correct
footnote numbers and original page numbers for citing. Carefully
reproduced from the original book but in a modern, readable format.
Quid Pro's Legal Legends Series offers high-quality editions of
legal scholarship, in print and digital formats. In addition, each
book contains a scholar's new Foreword and biographical summary, to
place the work in historical context and explain it to the reader.
Current important events in the U.S. legal profession and legal
ethics, with up-to-the-minute research and rules, are explored by
Tulane law students from an advanced ethics seminar of spring 2010
and several independent study papers. The collection is edited by
Tulane legal ethics professor Steven Alan Childress, and he surveys
the big stories of 2009-2010 in his Foreword. Purchase of this book
benefits Tulane PILF, a nonprofit student group which funds public
interest and indigent client representations throughout the
country. Topics include social networking, "friending," and
internet advertising (and very recent court decisions about these
areas); ancillary businesses controlled by lawyers, particularly
under the LMRDA as interpreted by the Obama administration; the
Supreme Court's 2009 decision on judicial campaign finance, and its
recent aftermath along with policies of judicial recusal and
elections; and ethics and professionalism in settlement
negotiations.
A new take on Holmes' classic study of law and judicial development
of rules. "The life of the law has not been logic: it has been
experience." Annotated throughout with simple
clarifications-decoding and demystifying it for the first time-to
make it accessible to a new generation of readers. Features new
Foreword and extensive notes by Steven Alan Childress, J.D., Ph.D.,
law professor at Tulane. Includes correct footnote numbers and
original page numbers for citing. Contains rare photographs and
insightful biographical section as well. As lamented by Holmes'
premier biographer in 2006, The Common Law "is very likely the
best-known book ever written about American law. But it is a
difficult, sometimes obscure book, which today's lawyers and law
students find largely inaccessible." No longer. With insertions and
simple definitions of the original's language and concepts, this
version makes it live for college students (able to "get it," at
last, with legal terms explained), plus law students, lawyers, and
anyone wanting to understand his great book. No previous edition
has offered annotations. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. compiled his
master work in 1881 from lectures on the origins, reasoning, and
import of the common law. It jump-started Legal Realism and
established law as a pragmatic way to solve problems and make
policy, not just a bucket of rules. It has stood the test of time
as one of the most important and influential studies of law. This
book is interesting for a vast audience-including historians,
students, and political scientists. It is also an often-recommended
read before law school or in the 1L year. High quality edition from
Quid Pro's Legal Legends Series. Paperback edition now in its
second printing. Also available in hardcover and ebook formats.
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