Claremont Colleges Digital Library
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The constitution of conflict : how the Supreme Court undermines the separation of powers.
Legal citation in a nutshell /
"Learning legal citation is one of the difficult (and sometimes admittedly annoying) tasks that students new to the law face. This book is designed to ease that task. It initially focuses on conventions that underlie all accepted forms and systems of legal citation. Building on that understanding and an explanation of the process of using citations in legal writing, the book then discusses and illustrates the particular rules of The Bluebook for citing cases, statutes, and all other major legal sources. Its unique appendices provide a useful reference resource to aid students in formulating citations" -- Publisher's description
American law ::an introduction /
An accessible introduction to the American legal system and is a vital resource to anyone interested in understanding how this social system works. Its focus is on law in practice, the role of the law in American society, and how the social context affects the living law of the United States. It covers the institutions of law creation and application, law in American government, American legal culture and the legal profession, American criminal and civil justice, and civil rights
Patent practice & policy in the Pacific Rim.
Patent practice and policy in the Pacific Rim provides analysis and primary text of the patent laws and regulations of nearly 20 Pacific Rim nations
Pennsylvania school personnel actions.
Pennsylvania school personnel actions analyzes laws governing hiring, firing, disciplining, and furloughing of employees in Pennsylvania school districts, area vocational-technical schools, and intermediate units
Articles of a convention entered into between George Graham, specially authorized thereto by the President of the United States, and the undersigned Chiefs and Headmen of the Cherokee Nation, duly empowered by said nation.
Default rules in private law /
Drawing on the experience of recognised experts from across a range of different fields and jurisdictions, this landmark publication tackles default rules in private law in comparative perspective. Often underestimated, but highly influential, default rules are non-mandatory rules that kick in where nothing else has been agreed or provided. The contributions explore default rules from a variety of angles relevant to both scholarship and legal practice, including: · behavioural aspects and the role of platform terms in the digital age; · the remit and operation of defaults in different areas, ranging from contract and commercial law to succession, civil procedure and private international law; · a comparison between Common law and Civilian approaches as well as the EU level; · the perspectives of different 'players' engaged in the generation and application of default rules