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"LEGAL HISTORY "
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Women and justice for the poor : a history of legal aid, 1863-1945
\"Women and Justice for the Poor re-examines our fundamental assumptions about the American legal profession, and the boundaries between \"professional\" lawyers, \"lay lawyers,\" and social workers. Putting legal history and women's history in dialogue, it demonstrates that nineteenth-century women's organizations first offered legal aid to the poor and that middle-class women functioning as lay lawyers, provided such assistance. By the early twentieth century, male lawyers founded their own legal aid societies. These new legal aid lawyers created an imagined history of legal aid and a blueprint for its future in which women played no role and their accomplishments were intentionally omitted. In response, women social workers offered harsh criticisms of legal aid leaders and developed a more robust social work model of legal aid. These different models produced conflicting understandings of expertise, professionalism, the rule of law, and ultimately the meaning of justice for the poor\"-- Provided by publisher.
The Ideas of Man and Woman in Renaissance France
2011,2016,2013
The Ideas of Man and Woman in Renaissance France provides the first comprehensive comparison of the printed debates in the 1500s over the superiority or inferiority of woman - the Querelle des femmes - and the dignity and misery of man. Analysing these writings side by side, Lyndan Warner reveals the extent to which Renaissance authors borrowed commonplaces from both traditions as they praised or blamed man or woman and habitually considered opposite and contrary points of view. In the law courts reflections on the virtues and vices of man and woman had a practical application-to win cases-and as Warner demonstrates, Parisian lawyers employed this developing rhetoric in family disputes over inheritance and marriage, and amplified it in the published versions of their pleadings. Tracing these ideas and modes of thinking from the writer's quill to the workshops and boutiques of printers and booksellers, Warner uses probate inventories to follow the books to the households of their potential male and female readers. Warner reveals the shifts in printed discussions of human nature from the 1500s to the early 1600s and shows how booksellers adapted the ways they marketed and sold new genres such as essays and lawyers' pleadings.
Legal publishing in antebellum America
Legal Publishing in Antebellum America presents a history of the law book publishing and distribution industry in the United States. Part business history, part legal history, part history of information diffusion, M. H. Hoeflich shows how various developments in printing and bookbinding, the introduction of railroads, and the expansion of mail service contributed to the growth of the industry from an essentially local industry to a national industry. Furthermore, the book ties the spread of a particular approach to law, that is, the scientific approach, championed by Northeastern American jurists to the growth of law publishing and law book selling and shows that the two were critically intertwined --Provided by publisher.
Judgment and Mercy
2023
In Judgment and Mercy
, Martin J. Siegel offers an insightful and compelling
biography of Irving Robert Kaufman, the judge infamous for
condemning Julius and Ethel Rosenberg to death for atomic
espionage.
In 1951, world attention fixed on Kaufman's courtroom as its
ambitious young occupant stridently blamed the Rosenbergs for the
Korean War. To many, the harsh sentences and their preening author
left an enduring stain on American justice. But then the judge from
Cold War central casting became something unexpected: one of the
most illustrious progressive jurists of his day.
Upending the simplistic portrait of Judge Kaufman as a
McCarthyite villain, Siegel shows how his pathbreaking decisions
desegregated a Northern school for the first time, liberalized the
insanity defense, reformed Attica-era prisons, spared John Lennon
from politically motivated deportation, expanded free speech,
brought foreign torturers to justice, and more. Still, the
Rosenberg controversy lingered. Decades later, changing times and
revelations of judicial misconduct put Kaufman back under siege.
Picketers dogged his footsteps as critics demanded impeachment. And
tragedy stalked his family, attributed in part to the long ordeal.
Instead of propelling him to the Supreme Court, as Kaufman once
hoped, the case haunted him to the end.
Absorbingly told, Judgment and Mercy brings to life a
complex man by turns tyrannical and warm, paranoid and altruistic,
while revealing intramural Jewish battles over assimilation, class,
and patriotism. Siegel, who served as Kaufman's last law clerk,
traces the evolution of American law and politics in the twentieth
century and shows how a judge unable to summon mercy for the
Rosenbergs nonetheless helped expand freedom for all.
Women before the court : law and patriarchy in the Anglo-American world, 1600-1800
This book offers an innovative, comparative approach to the study of women's legal rights during a formative period of Anglo-American history. It traces how colonists transplanted English legal institutions to America, examines the remarkable depth of women's legal knowledge and shows how the law increasingly undermined patriarchal relationships between parents and children, masters and servants, husbands and wives. The book will be of interest to scholars of Britain and colonial America, and to laypeople interested in how women in the past navigated and negotiated the structures of authority that governed them. It is packed with fascinating stories that women related to the courts in cases ranging from murder and abuse to debt and estate litigation. Ultimately, it makes a remarkable contribution to our understandings of law, power and gender in the early modern world.
Non-Muslims in the Early Islamic Empire
2011,2012
The Muslim conquest of the East in the seventh century entailed the subjugation of Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians and others. Although much has been written about the status of non-Muslims in the Islamic empire, no previous works have examined how the rules applying to minorities were formulated. Milka Levy-Rubin's remarkable book traces the emergence of these regulations from the first surrender agreements in the immediate aftermath of conquest to the formation of the canonic document called the Pact of 'Umar, which was formalized under the early 'Abbasids, in the first half of the ninth century. The study reveals that the conquered peoples themselves played a major role in the creation of these policies and that they were based on long-standing traditions, customs and institutions from earlier pre-Islamic cultures that originated in the worlds of both the conquerors and the conquered. In its connections to Roman, Byzantine and Sasanian traditions, the book will appeal to historians of Europe as well as Arabia and Persia.
Law addressing diversity : pre-modern Europe and India in comparison (13th-18th centuries)
by
Law Addressing Diversity: Pre-modern Europe and India in Comparison (12th to 17th Centuries) (Conference) (2014 : Universitèat Wien)
,
Ertl, Thomas, editor
,
Kruijtzer, Gijs, editor
in
Legal polycentricity Europe History Congresses.
,
Law Europe History Congresses.
,
Cultural pluralism Europe History Congresses.
The Problem of Piracy in the Early Modern World
2024,2025
In the early modern period, both legal and illegal maritime predation was a common occurrence, but the expansion of European maritime empires exacerbated existing and created new problems of piracy across the globe. This collection of original case studies addresses these early modern problems in three sections: first, states' attempts to exercise jurisdiction over seafarers and their actions; second, the multiple predatory marine practices considered 'piracy'; and finally, the many representations made about piracy by states or the seafarers themselves. Across nine chapters covering regions including southeast Asia, the Atlantic archipelago, the North African states, and the Caribbean Sea, the complexities of defining and criminalizing maritime predation is explored, raising questions surrounding subjecthood, interpolity law, and the impacts of colonization on the legal and social construction of ocean, port, and coastal spaces. Seeking the meanings and motivations behind piracy, this book reveals that while European states attempted to fashion piracy into a global and homogenous phenomenon, it was largely a local and often idiosyncratic issue.
Women and Magna Carta : a treaty for rights or wrongs?
\"Are women equal? Do women have equal rights? Have women's campaigns for justice, access to law, property ownership and child custody rights, and rights to bodily and psychic integrity, won women advances? When women fought for the right to vote, to be on juries, to be independent beings entitled to jobs, income, equal pay and the right to industrial action, did Magna Carta mean anything? Albeit no women were at Runnymede in 1215, have women used Magna Carta to underpin their own struggles against the abuse of power, the denial of natural justice and human rights, and the right to be and be regarded as human? Spanning eight hundred years of women's rights denial and achievement, Women and The Magna Carta shows how far women have come and how far there is yet to go. Can Magna Carta make a difference?\"--Back cover.
British Law and Governance in Treaty Port China 1842-1927
2024
In putting extraterritoriality into practice in the treaty ports, the British state did not simply withdraw rights from the Chinese state; it inhabited the space made by extraterritoriality by building institutions and engaging in practices which had consequences for the development of the treaty ports, and which need to be at the forefront of any attempt to understand colonialism in China. Through a focus both on the creation of law and institutions, and also on the management of British ‘problem populations’ – violent Europeans and ‘martial’ Indians – this book provides a revision of the history of empire and colonialism in China, explaining important features which have to date been glossed over in studies of other aspects of treaty port colonialism. Colonialism in China casts a long shadow, but key aspects of the British state’s central role in this history have before now been little understood.