American Journal of Legal History, 2000,
Vol.44
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Stephen Skinner
|
Blackstone's Support for the Militia
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-18
|
Judith Kelleher Schafer
|
The Murder of a "Lewd and Abandoned
Woman": State of Louisiana v. Abraham Parker
|
No.1
|
pp. 19-39
|
Myint Zan
|
Woe Unto Ye Lawyers: Three Royal Orders
Concerning Pleaders in Early Seventeenth-Century Burma
|
No.1
|
pp. 40-72
|
Howard T. Senzel
|
Looseleafing The Flow: An Anecdotal History of
One Technology for Updating
|
No.2
|
pp. 115-197
|
Laura Ikins Stern
|
Public Fame in the Fifteenth Century
|
No.2
|
pp. 198-222
|
Kathleen S. Murphy
|
Judge, Jury, Magistrate and Soldier:
Rethinking Law and Authority in Late Eighteenth- Century Ireland
|
No.3
|
pp. 231-256
|
Gary L. Mcdowell
|
The Politics of Meaning: Law Dictionaries and
the Liberal Tradition of Interpretation
|
No.3
|
pp. 257-283
|
M.H. Hoeflich
|
John Livingston & the Business of Law in
Nineteenth- Century America
|
No.4
|
pp. 347-368
|
Julie Novkov
|
Historicizing the Figure of the Child in Legal
Discourse: The Battle over the Regulation of Child Labor
|
No.4
|
pp. 369-404
|
Dennis K. Boman
|
The Dred Scott Case Reconsidered: The Legal
and Political Context in Missouri
|
No.4
|
pp. 405-428
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2001,
Vol.45
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Frederick C. Leiner
|
The Charming Betsy and the Marshall Court
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-21
|
Joel Fishman
|
An Early Pennsylvania Legal Periodical: The
Pennsylvania Law Journal, 1842- 1848
|
No.1
|
pp. 22-50
|
Joseph Plescia
|
Judicial Accountability and Immunity in Roman
Law
|
No.1
|
pp. 51-70
|
Michael G. Collins
|
October Term, 1896- Embracing Due Process
|
No.1
|
pp. 71-97
|
Robert M. Jarvis, Phyllis Coleman
|
Early Baseball Law
|
No.2
|
pp. 117-131
|
Philip Gaines
|
The "True Lawyer" in America:
Discursive Construction of the Legal Profession in the Nineteenth Century
|
No.2
|
pp. 132-153
|
David Jenkins
|
The Sedition Act of 1798 and the Incorporation
of Seditious Libel into First Amendment Jurisprudence
|
No.2
|
pp. 154-213
|
Tim Thornton
|
The Palatinate of Durham and the Maryland
Charter
|
No.3
|
pp. 235-255
|
George F. Steckley
|
Bottomry Bonds in the Seventeenth- Century
Admiralty Court
|
No.3
|
pp. 256-277
|
R. Blake Brown, Bruce A. Kimball
|
When Holmes Borrowed from Langdell: The
"Ultra Legal" Formalism and Public Policy of Northern Securities
(1904)
|
No.3
|
pp. 278-321
|
Peter L. Reic
|
Dismantling the Pueblo: Hispanic Municipal
Land Rights in California Since 1850
|
No.4
|
pp. 353-370
|
Jeffrey S. Dimmig
|
Palatine Liberty: Pennsylvania German
Opposition to the Direct Tax of 1798
|
No.4
|
pp. 371-390
|
Alan G. Gles
|
Self- Incrimination Privilege Dvelopment in
the Nineteenth- Century Federal Courts: Questions of Procedure, Privilege,
Production, Immunity and Compulsion
|
No.4
|
pp. 391-467
|
Greg Taylor
|
The Grand Jury of South Australi
|
No.4
|
pp. 468-516
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2004,
Vol.46
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Kathleen S. Goddard
|
A Case of Injustice? The Trial of John Bellingham
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-25
|
Deborah A. Rosen
|
Colonization Through Law: The Judicial Defense
of State Indian Legislation, 1790- 1880
|
No.1
|
pp. 26-54
|
Erwin C. Surrency
|
The Transition from Colonialism to Independenc
|
No.1
|
pp. 55-81
|
Eric Biber
|
The Price of Admission: Causes, Effects, and
Patterns of Conditions Imposed on States Entering the Union
|
No.2
|
pp. 119-208
|
Laura Ikins Stern
|
Politics and Law in Renaissance Florence and
Venice
|
No.2
|
pp. 209-234
|
William R. Casto
|
Foreign Affairs Crises and the Constitution's
Case or Controversy Limitation: Notes from the Founding Era
|
No.3
|
pp. 237-270
|
Robert M. Ireland
|
The Problem of Local, Private, and Special
Legislation in the Nineteenth-Century United States
|
No.3
|
pp. 271-299
|
Marcy Lynn Karin
|
Esther Morris and Her Equality State: From
Council Bill 70 to Life on the Bench
|
No.3
|
pp. 300-343
|
Donald M. Middlebrooks
|
Reviving Thomas Jefferson's Jury: Sparf and
Hansen v. United States Reconsidered
|
No.4
|
pp. 353-421
|
Stephen A. Siegel
|
Francis Wharton's Orthodoxy: God, Historical
Jurisprudence, and Classical Legal Thought
|
No.4
|
pp. 422-446
|
Jayanth K. Krishnan
|
Professor Kingsfield Goes to Delhi: American
Academics, the Ford Foundation, and the Development of Legal Education in
India
|
No.4
|
pp. 447-499
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2005,
Vol.47
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Samuel J. Levine
|
Rediscovering Julius Henry Cohen and the
Origins of the Business/Profession Dichotomy: A Study in the Discourse of
Early Twentieth Century Legal Professionalism
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-34
|
Daniel D. Blinka
|
Jefferson and Juries: The Problem of Law,
Reason, and Politics in the New Republic
|
No.1
|
pp. 35-103
|
Katherine J. Carver
|
The Legal Implications and Mysteries
Surrounding the Archimedes Palimpsest
|
No.2
|
pp. 119-160
|
Ulrike Muessig, Nee Sei
|
The Common Legal Tradition of a Court
Established by Law: Historical Foundations of Art. 6 para. 1 European
Convention on Human Rightsl
|
No.2
|
pp. 161-182
|
William E. Nelson
|
The Utopian Legal Order of the Massachusetts
Bay Colony, 1630- 1686
|
No.2
|
pp. 183-230
|
Anna Pervukhin
|
Deodands: A Study in the Creation of Common
Law Rules
|
No.3
|
pp. 237-256
|
Bruce A. Kimball, Pedro Reyes
|
The "First Modem Civil Procedure
Course" as Taught by C.C. Langdell, 1870- 78
|
No.3
|
pp. 257-303
|
Joseph Biancalana
|
The Legal Framework of Arbitration in
Fifteenth- Century England
|
No.4
|
pp. 347-382
|
Gregory A. Hicks
|
Memory and Pluralism on a Property Law
Frontier The Contested Landscape of New Mexico's Costilla Valley
|
No.4
|
pp. 383-411
|
Thomas A. Balmer
|
"Present Appreciation and Future
Advantage:" A Note on the Influence of Hobbes on Holmes
|
No.4
|
pp. 412-434
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2006,
Vol.48
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Ronald L. Nelson
|
Social Instrumentalism in the Jacksonian
Decade: State High Court Decisions Regarding Marriage and Religion, 1828-
1837
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-38
|
Carli N. Conklin
|
Transformed, Not Transcended: The Role of
Extrajudicial Dispute Resolution in Antebellum Kentucky and New Jersey by
|
No.1
|
pp. 39-98
|
Eric Schepard
|
The Great Dissenter's Greatest Dissents: The
First Justice Harlan, The "Color- Blind" Constitution and the
Meaning of his Dissents in the Insular Cases for the War on Terror
|
No.2
|
pp. 119-146
|
John R. Vile
|
The Critical Role of Committees at the U.S.
Constitutional Convention of 1787
|
No.2
|
pp. 147-176
|
Vernon Valentine Palmer
|
The Customs of Slavery: The War Without Arms
|
No.2
|
pp. 177-218
|
R. Volney Riser
|
Disfranchisement, the U.S. Constitution, and
the Federal Courts: Alabama's 1901 Constitutional Convention Debates the
Grandfather Clause
|
No.3
|
pp. 237-279
|
Joshua C. Tate
|
Ownership and Possession in the Early Common
Law
|
No.3
|
pp. 280-313
|
Timothy S. Huebner
|
Lawyer, Litigant, Leader: John Marshall and
His Papers- A Review Essay
|
No.3
|
pp. 314-326
|
Stephen A. Siegel
|
The Origin of the Compelling State Interest
Test and Strict Scrutiny
|
No.4
|
pp. 355-407
|
Amanda Quester
|
Evolution Before Revolution: Dynamism in
Connecticut Landlord- Tenant Law Prior to the Late 1960s
|
No.4
|
pp. 408-452
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2007,
Vol.49
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Gail J. Hupper
|
The Rise of an Academic Doctorate in Law:
Origins Through World War II
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-60
|
James W. Fox Jr.
|
The Law of Many Faces: Antebellum Contract Law
Background of Reconstruction- Era Freedom of Contract
|
No.1
|
pp. 61-112
|
Donald L. Drakeman
|
Everson v. Board of Education and the Quest
for the Historical Establishment Clause
|
No.2
|
pp. 119-168
|
Robert Fabrikant
|
Lincoln Legal Acolutes, A Comment on Professor
Akhil Reed Amar's The American Constitution: A Biography (2005), And Judge
Frank J. Williams' "Doing Less" And "Doing More": The
President And The Proclamation Legally, Militarily and Politically, In The
Emancipation Proclamation, Three Views (2006).
|
No.2
|
pp. 169-179
|
Louisa M. A. Heiny
|
Radical Abolitionist Influence on Federalism
and the Fourteenth Amendment
|
No.2
|
pp. 180-196
|
David Frederick
|
Historical Lessons from the Life and Death of
the Federal Estate Tax
|
No.2
|
pp. 197-216
|
Rudolf B. Lamy
|
The Influence of History Upon a Plain Text
Reading of the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States
|
No.2
|
pp. 217-230
|
Nicholas May
|
Holy Rebellion: Religious Assembly Laws in
Antebellum South Carolina and Virginia by
|
No.3
|
pp. 237-256
|
Brent Tarter, Wythe Holt
|
The Apparent Political Selection of Federal
Grand Juries in Virginia, 1789- 1809
|
No.3
|
pp. 257-283
|
Anthony M. Joseph
|
The "Pennsylvania Model": The
Judicial Criminalization of Abortion in Pennsylvania, 1838- 1850
|
No.3
|
pp. 284-320
|
Scott J. Shackelford, Lawrence M. Friedman
|
Legally Incompetent: A Research Note
|
No.3
|
pp. 321-342
|
Imre S. Szalai
|
Modern Arbitration Values and the First World
War
|
No.4
|
pp. 355-391
|
Greg Taylor
|
Torrens' Contemporaneous Antipodean Simulacrum
|
No.4
|
pp. 392-437
|
Sara Deutch Schotland
|
Defiled and De- Sexed: Dickens's Portrayal of
a Woman Waging Law
|
No.4
|
pp. 438-455
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2008-2010,
Vol.50
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Robert M. Jarvis
|
John B. West: Founder of the West Publishing
Company
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-22
|
Kevin Costello
|
The Court of Admiralty of Ireland, 1745- 1756
|
No.1
|
pp. 23-48
|
Ethan Davis
|
An Administrative Trail of Tears: Indian
Removal
|
No.1
|
pp. 49-100
|
Edward J. Larson
|
An American Tragedy: Retelling the Leopold-
Loeb Story in Popular Culture
|
No.2
|
pp. 119-156
|
Allison Brownell Tirres
|
Lawyers and Legal Borderlands
|
No.2
|
pp. 157-199
|
Robert Flannigan
|
The Joint Venture Fable
|
No.2
|
pp. 200-222
|
P. M. Vasudev
|
Corporate Law and Its Efficiency: A Review of
History
|
No.3
|
pp. 237-283
|
John Braeman
|
"The People's Lawyer" Revisited:
Louis D. Brandeis versus the United Shoe Machinery Company
|
No.3
|
pp. 284-304
|
Albert J. Martinea
|
The Palatinate Clause of the Maryland Charter,
1632- 1776: From Independent Jurisdiction to Independence
|
No.3
|
pp. 305-325
|
Daniel L. Vande Zande
|
Coercive Power and the Demise of the Star
Chamber
|
No.3
|
pp. 326-349
|
Aniceto Mssferrer
|
Defense of the Common Law Against Postbellum
American Codification: Reasonable and Fallacious Argumentation
|
No.4
|
pp. 355-430
|
Patricia A. Reid
|
The Haitian Revolution, Black Petitioners and
Refugee Widows in Maryland, 1796- 1820
|
No.4
|
pp. 431-452
|
Nora Rotter Tillman, Seth Barrett Tillman
|
A Fragment on Shall and May
|
No.4
|
pp. 453-458
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2011,
Vol.51
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Robert M. Jarvis
|
A Brief History of the American Journal of
Legal History
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-12
|
Robert W. Behrman
|
Equal or Effective Representation:
Redistricting Jurisprudence in Canada and the United States
|
No.2
|
pp. 277-304
|
Ronald Chester
|
History's Orphan: Arthur MacLean and the Legal
Education of Women
|
No.2
|
pp. 305-332
|
Philip Gaines
|
Writing the Discursive Proto- Culture of
Modern Anglo- American Trial Advocacy: Edward William Cox's The Advocate
|
No.2
|
pp. 333-358
|
Scott D. Gerber
|
Bringing Ideas Back In- A Brief Historiography
of American Colonial Law
|
No.2
|
pp. 359-374
|
Williamm Domnarski
|
The Correspondence of Henry Friendly and
Richard A. Posner 1982- 86
|
No.3
|
pp. 395-416
|
Josh Blackman
|
OutFoxed Pierson v. Post and the Natural Law
|
No.3
|
pp. 417-460
|
Marie Ashe
|
Privacy and Prurience; An Essay on American
Law, Religion, and Women
|
No.3
|
pp. 461-504
|
Randy Beck
|
Self- Conscious Dicta: The Origins of Roe v.
Wade's Trimester Framework
|
No.3
|
pp. 505-530
|
John M. Breen, Lee J. Strang
|
The Road Not Taken: Catholic Legal Education
at the Middle of the Twentieth Century
|
No.4
|
pp. 553-638
|
Ryan Patrick Alford
|
The Star Chamber and the Regulation of the
Legal Profession 1570- 1640
|
No.4
|
pp. 639-726
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2012,
Vol.52
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
William R. Casto
|
Advising Presidents: Robert Jackson and the
Destroyers- for- Bases Deal
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-136
|
Robert Justin Goldstein
|
Getting Delisted: The Independent Socialist
League's [Ultimately] Successful Challenge to the Attorney General's List of
Subversive Activities, 1948- 1958
|
No.2
|
pp. 143-182
|
Bernardo Perninan
|
The Origin of Privacy as a Legal Value: A
Reflection on Roman and English Law
|
No.2
|
pp. 183-202
|
Jayanth K. Krishnan
|
Academic SAILERS: The Ford Foundation and the
Efforts to Shape Legal Education in Africa, 1957- 1977
|
No.3
|
pp. 261-324
|
Michele Pifferi
|
Individualization of Punishment and the Rule
of Law: Reshaping Legality in the United States and Europe between the 19th
and the 20th Century
|
No.3
|
pp. 325-379
|
Robert M. Jarvis
|
Is It Legal?: A Forgotten Gem of British
Television
|
No.4
|
pp. 423-458
|
Laura Inglis
|
Substantive Due Process: Continuation of
Vested Rights?
|
No.4
|
pp. 459-498
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2013,
Vol.53
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
William G. Ross
|
Constitutional Issues Involving the
Controversy over American Membership in the League of Nations, 1918-1920
|
No.1
|
pp. 1- 88
|
Simon Middleton
|
Legal Change, Economic Culture, and Imperial
Authority in New Amsterdam and Early New York City
|
No.1
|
pp. 89- 120
|
Kristin A. Olbertson
|
Religion and Rights in Nineteenth-Century
American Law: Reflections on the Work of Elizabeth B. Clark
|
No.1
|
pp. 121- 130
|
Robert J. Reinstein
|
Slavery, Executive Power and International
Law: The Haitian Revolution and American Constitutionalism
|
No.2
|
pp. 141- 238
|
Richard A. Hawkins
|
The Marketing of Legal Services in the United
States, 1855-1912: A Case Study of Guggenheimer, Untermyer & Marshall of
New York City and the Predecessor Partnerships
|
No.2
|
pp. 239- 264
|
Wilfrid E. Rumble
|
Austin in America The Case of John Chipman
Gray
|
No.3
|
pp. 265- 302
|
Robert F. Castro
|
Liberty Like Thunder Race, Article XI
Enforcement, and the Odyssey of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848)
|
No.3
|
pp. 303- 328
|
Markus G. Puder
|
Uncertain Land Titles in Louisiana's Formative
Years: Colonial Grants, John Marshall's Foster Opinion, and Lauterpachtian
Interplays between Private Law and International Law
|
No.3
|
pp. 329- 352
|
Vanessa Banni-Vinas
|
Correcting a Ballerina's Story The Truth
behind Makletzova v. Diaghileff
|
No.3
|
pp. 353- 362
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2013,
Vol.53
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
Joan Sidney Howland
|
A History of Legal History Courses Offered in American Law
Schools
|
No.4
|
pp. 363-378
|
Christian G. Fritz
|
Teaching Legal History in the First Year Curriculum
|
No.4
|
pp. 379-383
|
Peter D. Garlock
|
Teaching American Legal History in a Law School
|
No.4
|
pp. 384-388
|
Carlton F.W. Larson
|
Teaching Legal History at a Small Law School
|
No.4
|
pp. 389-392
|
Stephen B. Presser
|
What I Do When I Teach Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 393-396
|
Logan Everett Sawyer III
|
Legal History in Context
|
No.4
|
pp. 397-401
|
Craig A. Stern
|
A Legal History Course for a Christian Legal Education
|
No.4
|
pp. 402-404
|
Michael Ariens
|
Teaching American Legal History Through Storytelling
|
No.4
|
pp. 405-409
|
Scott Douglas Gerber
|
Teaching the Legal History You Write About
|
No.4
|
pp. 410-413
|
Timothy J. Innes
|
Art and Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 414-417
|
Catherine J. Lanctot
|
Using Videos to Teach American Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 418-420
|
Ryan Rowberry
|
Legal History Through Digital Sources
|
No.4
|
pp. 421-425
|
Geoffrey R. Watson
|
The Fun of Teaching American Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 426-430
|
Amitai Aviram
|
Conceptualizing the Evolution of Corporate Law
|
No.4
|
pp. 431-435
|
Bryan Camp
|
An Antebellum Slave Law Colloquium
|
No.4
|
pp. 436-440
|
Thomas J. Horton
|
Teaching America's Antitrust Laws and Their Enforcement
|
No.4
|
pp. 441-444
|
Mae Kuykendall
|
Designing a Course in Judicial Biography
|
No.4
|
pp. 445-449
|
Sheldon M. Novick
|
The Search for National Identity
|
No.4
|
pp. 450-453
|
Edward C. Papenfuse, Garrett Power
|
Legal History Seminar: Leading Maryland Cases
|
No.4
|
pp. 454-456
|
William E. Butler
|
On Teaching the History of International Law
|
No.4
|
pp. 457-461
|
Williamson B.C. Chang
|
Hawaii: Pacific Crucible of American Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 462-465
|
Daniel Klerman
|
Reading, Writing, and Questions in Advance: Teaching English
Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 466-469
|
Peter L. Reich
|
The Multidimensional Teaching of Legal History
|
No.4
|
pp. 470-473
|
Charles J. Reid
|
Imagination and Creativity: My History of Marriage Seminar
|
No.4
|
pp. 474-477
|
Jonathan Rose
|
Becoming a Legal History Teacher
|
No.4
|
pp. 478-481
|
Douglas E. Abrams
|
Teaching Legal History in the Age of Practical Legal Education
|
No.4
|
pp. 482-487
|
Howard Bromberg
|
Teaching Legal History Through Legal Skills
|
No.4
|
pp. 488-492
|
Gregory F. Jacob
|
Using History to Teach Students How to be Lawyers
|
No.4
|
pp. 493-497
|
Robert M. Jarvis
|
Legal History: Teaching Skills Practicing Lawyers Need
|
No.4
|
pp. 498-501
|
Molly Selvin
|
The History of Contemporary Law and Policy
|
No.4
|
pp. 502-506
|
Michael J. Slinger
|
What the Actions of Abe Lincoln Continue to Teach Us Today
|
No.4
|
pp. 507-511
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2014,
Vol.54
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
LAURA CAHILLANE
|
An Insight Into the Irish Free State Constitution
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-38
|
Sconr GELBER
|
Child Support Litigation and the "Necessity" of
American Higher Education, 1920- 70
|
No.1
|
pp. 39-72
|
Andrew NORRIS
|
A Maelstrom of International Law and Intrigue: The Remarkable
Voyage of the S.S. City of Flint
|
No.1
|
pp. 73-105
|
W. H. BRYSON
|
Virginia Law Reports
|
No.2
|
pp. 107-120
|
ROBERT M. JARVIS
|
Leon A. Berezniak: The Theatrical Counselor
|
No.2
|
pp. 121-146
|
EDWARD J. LARSON
|
ID in the Courts: Anti- Evolutionism for the 21st Century
|
No.2
|
pp. 147-167
|
WILLIAM E. NELSON
|
The Law of Colonial Maryland: Virginia Without Its Grandeur
|
No.2
|
pp. 168-199
|
DONALD E. WILKES
|
Habeas Corpus Proceedings in the High Court of Parliament in the
Reign of James I, 1603- 1625
|
No.2
|
pp. 200-263
|
W. LEWIS BURKE
|
Pink Franklin v. South Carolina: The NAACP's First Case
|
No.3
|
pp. 265-302
|
GREG TAYLOR
|
The East German Contribution to Equal Gay and Lesbian Rights in
Germany
|
No.3
|
pp. 303-350
|
STEPHEN J. WARE
|
A 20th Century Debate About Imprisonment for Debt
|
No.3
|
pp. 351-377
|
CHRISTOPHER COLLIER
|
The Campaign for Women's Property Rights: Sarah Banks's Story
|
No.3
|
pp. 378-428
|
ALISON W. CONNER
|
The Lawyer Who Haunts Us: Yin Zhaoshi and the Bright Day
|
No.4
|
pp. 429-468
|
CHARLES SHEEHAN
|
Solicitor General Charles Fahy and Honorable Defense of the
Japanese- American Exclusion Cases
|
No.4
|
pp. 469-520
|
American Journal of Legal History, 2015,
Vol.55
|
Author
|
Title
|
number
|
Page to Page
|
THOMAS A. GREEN, MERRILL CATHARINE HODNEFIELD
|
Reflections on Freedom and Criminal Responsibility in Late
Twentieth Century American Legal Thought
|
No.1
|
pp. 1-33
|
TIMOTHY S. HUEBNER
|
Emory Speer and Federal Enforcement of the Rights of African
Americans, 1880- 1910
|
No.1
|
pp. 34-63
|
ROBERT M. JARVIS
|
Aboitiz and Co. v. Price: Some Lingering Questions
|
No.1
|
pp. 64-88
|
ERIC W. RISE
|
Crime, Comity and Civil Rights: The NAACP and the Extradition of
Southern Black Fugitives
|
No.1
|
pp. 119-147
|
SCON D. GERBER
|
Law and Religion in Colonial Connecticut
|
No.2
|
pp. 149-193
|
MICHAEL ASHLEY STEIN, CHRISTOPHER P. GUZELIAN, KRISTINA M.
GUZELIAN
|
Expert Testimony in Nineteenth Century Malapraxis Actions
|
No.2
|
pp. 194-207
|
PETER IRONS
|
How Solicitor General Charles Fahy Misled the Supreme Court In
the Japanese American Internment Cases: A Reply to Charles Sheehan
|
No.2
|
pp. 208-226
|