Academic literature on the topic 'American Judicature Society'

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Journal articles on the topic "American Judicature Society"

1

Cohn, Avern, and Michael R. Belknap. "To Improve the Administration of Justice: A History of the American Judicature Society." Michigan Historical Review 19, no. 1 (1993): 64. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/20173374.

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Gelfand, Mark I., and Michael R. Belknap. "To Improve the Administration of Justice: A History of the American Judicature Society." American Journal of Legal History 37, no. 4 (October 1993): 517. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/845820.

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Amendola, Karen L., and John T. Wixted. "The Role of Site Variance in the American Judicature Society Field Study Comparing Simultaneous and Sequential Lineups." Journal of Quantitative Criminology 33, no. 1 (December 17, 2015): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10940-015-9273-6.

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Wilson, Lee B. "A “Manifest Violation” of the Rights of Englishmen: Rights Talk and the Law of Property in Early Eighteenth-Century Jamaica." Law and History Review 33, no. 3 (July 8, 2015): 543–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0738248015000279.

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In 1706, Jamaica's provost marshal received a writ of escheat from the island's Supreme Court of Judicature. The writ directed him to empanel a jury of “Twelve and Lawful Men of the Neighbourhood” who would determine whether the slaves of James Whitchurch, a Jamaican merchant, should be escheated—returned—to the Crown. Did the “Negro Woman Slave Commonly Called Catalina” and her “Seaven Pickaninny” belong to Whitchurch, or could Queen Anne claim her prerogative right to an escheat because the previous owner of the slaves, Charles Delamaine, had died without an heir? The jury found in the Crown's favor, but a dissatisfied Whitchurch petitioned Queen Anne for relief, asking her to return the slaves and quiet his title. Whitchurch's petition, the first Jamaican escheat case to come before the Queen, sparked a transatlantic legal controversy as colonists, Assembly members, and imperial officials weighed the Crown's prerogative right to escheats against local political grievances and the Board of Trade's desire to encourage West Indian settlement and trade. This seemingly mundane conflict over property law quickly acquired constitutional significance, generating the kind of rights talk so familiar to early American historians: Jamaican colonists claimed the rights of Englishmen, and the Jamaican Assembly asserted an institutional capacity akin to Parliament. In this article, I contextualize colonists' rights talk, rooting their claims to English rights in concerns about the administration of property law during a crucial liminal moment in Jamaican history. As the colony transitioned from a small-scale to a large-scale plantation economy and from a society with slaves to a slave society, property and the law that governed it became the focus of intense political conflict.
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MINES, MATTISON. "Courts of Law and Styles of Self in Eighteenth-Century Madras: From Hybrid to Colonial Self." Modern Asian Studies 35, no. 1 (February 2001): 33–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x01003687.

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My concern is public representations of individuals and how these were affected by British East India Company courts, judicial proceedings, and the law in Madras city during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Company records reveal that this was a period of dramatic transformation in self-representation, just as it also was in Company rule. My purpose is to trace the transformation of the manner in which individuals represented themselves and others and what this process reveals about the constitution of Madras society and Company rule before and after the establishment of an independent judiciary at the end of the eighteenth century. Most particularly, in this paper I seek to demonstrate how the transformation of East India Company courts of judicature from interested courts, strictly controlled by the Company, to independent courts is associated with changes that greatly affected the manner in which individuals—both British and Indian—thought of themselves and others in Madras city public life. This transformation was of a piece with the establishment of independent judiciaries in England and North America at the time and indicates how Madras too was influenced by these political developments.
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Chiassoni, Pierluigi. "Thomas Jefferson, I dilemmi della democrazia americana, translated and edited by Alberto Giordano, with a preface by Dino Cofrancesco (Novi Ligure: Città del Silenzio, 2007)." Nordicum-Mediterraneum 5, no. 1 (2010). http://dx.doi.org/10.33112/nm.5.1.25.

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The history of the Italian Republic has been a history of a remarkable cultural, social, economic, and legal progress for almost thirty years. Of course, many serious issues were left unattended (organized crime and the limits of political immorality rate among the foremost); but, on the whole, the balance was not so bad (our Constitution and our laws concerning judicature, divorce, abortion, and the national health service, for instance, were taken as examples by other European countries coming out from dictatorships and cultural depression). Terrorism, in the 1970s-1980s, was (taken as) a major drawback; in any case, terrorists on both extremes were finally, and utterly, defeated with the sole arms of the rule of law (no “special renditions”, no torture, no special military tribunals were resorted to as “necessary evils”, like in the dark global times following September 11), supported by a conscious and responsible civil society. The political establishment, however, did not grow up in morality, responsibility, and sense for the common good at the same pace of the most advanced sectors of civil society.
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Books on the topic "American Judicature Society"

1

Society, American Judicature, ed. American Judicature Society 75th anniversary, 1913-1988. Chicago, Ill. (25 E. Washington, Suite 1600, Chicago 60602): American Judicature Society, 1988.

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2

R, Belknap Michal, ed. To improve the administration of justice: A history of the American Judicature Society. Chicago, IL: American Judicature Society, 1992.

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Fenimore, Cooper James. The American democrat: The social and civic relations of the United States of America. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2010.

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Fenimore, Cooper James. The American democrat: The social and civic relations of the United States of America. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2010.

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5

Belknap. To Improve the Administration of Justice: A History of the American Judicature Society. Amer Judicature Society, 1992.

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6

American Judicature Society presents Faces of justice: An introduction to the courts : court employee study guide. Chicago: The Society, 1995.

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7

The American Judicature Society presents pre-bench training for state court judges: From advocate to arbiter : self study guide. Chicago, Ill: The Society, 1992.

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8

Fenimore, Cooper James. American Democrat. Barnes & Noble, Incorporated, 2012.

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9

Fenimore, Cooper James. The American Democrat. Blackstone Audiobooks, 1994.

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Fenimore, Cooper James. The American Democrat. Barnes & Noble, 2004.

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