Salem Press Catalog -- About The Book time line; keyword, category, geographical, personages, and comprehensive culturaland intellectual history, laws, acts, and legal history, exploration and http://www.salempress.com/TitleDetail.asp?ID=111
Patricia Seed, "Ceremonies Of Possession" skillfully blends cultural, intellectual, and legal history and the C. Journal ofSocial history 30.4 (Summer Spanish thinking about the personages involved in http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~rpekarek/gseed.html
Extractions: "After 1640, Europeans progressively viewed New World peoples and resources as inherently theirs, revenue-producing or strategic pawns on the table of European political chess. Viewed thus, measures justifying supplanting indigenous authority came to be seen as a matter of historical record after 1640 as newer enactments of possession more often transferred resources from one European group to another." (14) Even before they began to settle abroad, Englishmen were predisposed to experience the overseas world as a garden. Richard Hakluyt's 'Discourse on Western Planting' selectively appropriated earlier French writers' descriptions of Florida's agricultural abundance in order to advocate English colonialism; Walter Ralegh invoked the meaning of Florida for the same end." (26)
Museum Of The History Of Polish Jews - NEWSLETTER 02/2002 Minister of Foreign Affairs, several dozen personages from several Weil, Gotshal Manges, has offered legal care over of the Museum of the history of Polish http://www.jewishmuseum.org.pl/biuletyn02_2002-gb.html
Extractions: During his official visit to the US, Prime Minister Leszek Miller addressed members and representatives of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. The meeting was presided by Mortimer Zuckerman, the Chairman of the Conference. The Prime Minister's address was his only public speech in his official US program. By personal invitation, Jerzy Halbersztadt, Project Director of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews, accompanied the Prime Minister to the US. PM Miller concentrated on three issues: the restitution of Jewish municipal property, the restitution of Jewish private property, as well as the restitution of the memory of the lost Jewish community in Poland. Mr. Miller appealed to Jewish communities in the US to support the idea of creating the Museum. Following the Prime Minister's speech, Mr. Halbersztadt gave a presentation in which he outlined the vision of this future museum, which will serve as a cultural and educational center for further generations.
Extractions: Paper for the 4 th European Feminist Research Conference: Body, gender, subjectivity. Crossing borders of disciplines and institutions, Workshop 10: Ties that Bind: the Law, Economics and the Labour Market (Please do not quote without permission) Daniela Danna, PhD student, University of Trento (daniela.danna@soc.unitn.it) 1) Models of policies on prostitution In contemporary history there have been three main legislative models dealing with the sex trade phenomenon: prohibitionism that deems prostitution immoral sanctioned both the seller and the buyer; regulamentarism which considered it a necessary evil that had to be limited and controlled by keeping a tab on prostitutes to stop them from working if they suffered from venereal diseases; abolitionism that fought for the abolition of vexatious regulations towards prostitutes, because it saw them as a manifestation of male oppression toward women, and liberalized the act of prostitution itself while seeking to prosecute pimping, the traffic in women and in the versions of abolitionism concretely implemented also the organization of indoors prostitution and its aiding and abetting. Declarations of intents apart, out of which it is not possible to obtain precise indications for penal law, we may examine the documents of international conventions inspired by abolitionism and signed by the states to take measures against the exploitation of prostitution and the slave trade in women. The positions they assume are quite different and indicate the presence of at least two forms of abolitionism according to the status given to the will of the woman who prostitutes herself. The first conventions (1904 and 1910)
Black History Links From Professor Cunnea The Blacklist A list of Black personages who are also gay or Famous Laws, Cases, legal Issues. cases that might be of interest to students of Black history. http://members.aol.com/aacdrcnnea/black.htm
Extractions: This document was created by Professor Cunnea and is maintained by Professor Small of the Academic Assistance Center at America Online for the convenience of students using that service and others using the Internet for their personal education. (Keyword AAC at AOL). This site doesn't pretend to be a comprehensive listing of Black History resources on the net. It is meant solely as a homework helper for students from the primary grades up to the collegiate level. Links with AOL in the title will usually only respond to AOL users. All other links should work for everyone; please let me know if they don't. Offline bibliographical info is provided help students locate books via interlibrary loan if not on the shelves of their school or public libraries. This is meant to help students locate the books, not drop in to the backs of their research papers in lieu of actual research. Therefore, in most cases, some bibliographic data has been intentionally withheld, or not presented in standard bibliographical format. The topic headings might not seem to make sense to anyone doing systematic cataloging, but were chosen to reflect the topics most often assigned to students during Black History Month. Anyone with ideas about how to organize this material better should write to Professor Small! Click on any topic to be taken to that part of the site:
School Webpage Template For Courses - History / Social Sciences l'importance de certains personages ou groupes Prerequisite Canadian history in theTwentieth Century, Grade practical knowledge of Canada's legal system and http://www.ocdsb.edu.on.ca/meriweb/academics/history/history.html
Extractions: Grade Social Sciences Courses Teachers(2001-2002) Grade 10 CHC2P-Contemporary Canada: Life in the Twentieth Century Mr. Elliot C A CHC2D-Contemporary Canada:Life in the Twentieth Century CHC2DF-Le Canada et le monde d'aujourd'hui Ms.MacKechnie N -Contemporary Canada: Life in the Twentieth Century Mr.Bibaud A CHC2DI-Le Canada et le monde d'aujourd'hui Mr.Van Dusen D A CHC20-Civics 1/2 credit (compulsory) Ms.Rafuse Grade 11 CHW3M-World History to the 16th Century Ms.Chapman M.Boudreault CLU3M-Understanding Canadian Law ... Mr.Merridew Grade CHY4U-World History: The West and The World Ms.J.Johnston C HY4UF- Histoire Mondiale: L'Occident et le Monde Ms.Peters CLN4U-Canadian and International Law Ms.S.Johnson CPW4U-Canadian and World Politics Mr.P.Weintrager CHI4U-Canada: History, Identity, and Culture CIA4U-Analysing Current Economic Issues HSB4M- Challenge and Change in Society OAC ... BECOA-Economics OAC's can take Grade 12 courses and they will be recognized as an OAC credit Courses Grade 10 CHC2P-Contemporary Canada: Life in the Twentieth Century Credit value:1.0
Useful Books 17821873 , Cambridge Studies in English legal history, 1992. The Longman handbookof modern British history 1714-1980 lists of the official personages of the http://home.planet.nl/~pbdavis/Books.htm
Extractions: Home Loney home Documents Album ... Search this site William Loney RN - Background Home Loney Background Reference I have not actually seen the books marked * Naval, and naval political, history: Anon Instructions for the Guidance of Her Majesty's Naval Officers employed in the Suppression of the Slave Trade , T.R. Harrison, 1844, reissued on microfiche, Chadwyck-Healey Ltd, 1988. - 8 fiches. Beeler , John. F.: " British Naval Policy in the Gladstone-Disraeli Era, 1866-1880 ", Stanford University Press, Stanford, 1997 Bethell , Leslie: " The Mixed Commissions for the suppression of the transatlantic slave trade in the nineteenth century ", Journal of African History, VII , no. 1, 1966, 79-93 Clowes , William Laird: " The Royal Navy: a history from the earliest times to the death of Queen Victoria ", Sampson Low, Marston and Company, 1903 (also reprinted by Chatham Publishing, 1997 as " The Royal Navy: a history from the earliest times to 1900 ") in seven volumes, in particular volumes 6 and 7. Flemming , Fergus: " Barrow's Boys - a stirring story of daring, fortitude and outright lunacy ", Granta Books, 1998
Building Blocks Of The Past legacies of their most important personages or through career(s) or work history (ofteninvolving public service (political, government, legal, military); and http://www.nysm.nysed.gov/albany/art/art-bbpast.html
Extractions: T his essay focuses on community life in the past and considers issues related to the identification and understanding of historic communities. Let's begin by offering the half-borrowed observation that a community exists in the eye of its beholder. The term "community" means different things to different people. It is defined by each person on the basis of one's individual experiences, inclinations, and needs. As such, communities have been described in political or economic terms. Sometimes, they are identified by building architecture, street plans, or even natural features. But most often, people envision communities in humanistic terms. This essay focuses on communities that are defined by the lives and life stories of their members - the people who live in them. For the humanist, the term community begins with the coming together of people with something in common. We understand it as larger and more diverse than a family or other kinship group; probably more complex than a neighborhood or enclave; yet smaller than a county or country; and certainly less inclusive than the family of mankind. After a population of people with something in common, a community may be further articulated by political or legal constraints or by economic common denominators. Historic communities can be represented by the coming together of people in a relational situation over a period of time. Some communities undergo a series of evolutionary changes with individuals and groups of people coming and going during their sometimes very long life spans. Others do not persist and break up for numbers of reasons. Their people sometimes start over together in another place; as a group, are absorbed by another community; or are scattered to fit in new places as individuals or with kin.
The Historic Development Of Diplomacy of Peace gave this kind of legal universalism a by difficult neighbours during mostof its history. follow form, as these illustrious personages usually had http://www.eleves.ens.fr/home/mlnguyen/QI/hist_diplomacy.html
Extractions: d'accueil Histoire Droit ... Louze Reynold Riemer's course, IEP Paris 1999-2000 Burke was the first to use the term 'diplomat' in its modern sense (1796). Even Callières, the first theorician of modern diplomacy, spoke instead of ' négociateurs . One good definition is given by Sir Harold Nicholson in Diplomacy (1939): 'The ordered conduct of relations between one group of human beings and another group alien to themselves.' R.G. Feltham in his Diplomatic Handbook , states that: 'The purpose of diplomacy is communication.' In the same way, George Kennan, America's elder statesman, notes in At a Century's Ending that diplomacy is characterized by tasks: Communication, information, guidance. At the end, the final goal of diplomacy is defined in Bernard du Rosier's Short Treatise about Ambassadors (1436): 'The grand object of diplomacy is peace.' With primitive tribes, double-edged notion of sacrosanct status : protection/immunity, but also isolation of the people from the impurity of foreigners. Most recent examples: Seljuk Turks, Tatar Khans, medieval Venice, Byzantium, Russia both under Ivan the Terrible and Stalin and his successors, and China under Mao. Greek city states' diplomacy was conducted by orators. They had notions of accreditation or extraterritoriality. Some aspects of this are still present :
AG RETURNING FAVOUR TO JUDGE PAUL judge (Augustine Paul) who faced legal action (contempt event is unprecedented inMalaysian history, and probably the trouble is, these two personages are not http://www.geocities.com/seachange_2000/kq_blackguards.htm
COLUMBIA. PROBLEMS OF ROMAN legal history 529. recognize that its salient characteristic wasthe appearance on a magnificent scale of those political personages whom we http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Senate/3616/ProblemsRomanLegalHistory.html
Extractions: To attempt to recapitulate within the limits of a single paper the unsolved problems of Roman legal history would be an absurdity. Such an undertaking would make it necessary for us to follow the development of the Roman law from the Twelve Tables to Justinians law books in order to indicate what portions of this millenial movement are still obscure. Even then the survey would be incomplete, since the history of the Roman law neither begins with the Twelve Tables nor ends with Justinian. It begins at that unknown date when Rome began and it has not ended yet. To select a narrower period and to single out what seem the more important problems would be more feasible; but the mere enumeration of difficulties would be neither interesting nor profitable. The best excuse for a paper on the problems of any science is the writers conviction or hope that he may be able to make some contribution towards their solution, if it be only by suggesting unworked lines of investigation which appear to him to promise useful results. It is my belief that for the most important period of Roman legal historythe period in which the ancient Roman law, public and private, reached its highest development, and which extends, roughly speaking, from the middle of the third century before Christ to the middle of the third century after Christthere is a promising method of investigation or line of approach which as yet has been scantily utilized.
History | Undergraduate Program short group research presentation on historical personages or groups law, jurisprudence,the judiciary, and the legal profession in American history. http://www.emory.edu/HISTORY/undergrad/atlas/fall01.html
Extractions: For information on registration, preregistration, and days and times, please refer to the Registrar's Schedule of Courses. History 190-000 Freshman Colloquium: Warriors at Peace Ravina CANCELLED FRESHMEN ONLY Mann; MAX:9; WRT: Old System: No; New System: No Content: European expansion into the Americas after 1492 made possible increased production of sugar and other staples to satisfy changing patterns of consumption in the Old World. Production of many of these commodities took place on plantations and employed the labor of African slaves. This course draws on history, literature, film, and art history to probe the reasons for the rise of slavery in the New World, and its impact on Africa and the Americas, focusing especially on the experiences of the slaves. Texts: Mintz, Sweetness and Power ; Eltis, et. al., The DuBois Consolidated Slave Trade Database ; Klein, The Atlantic Slave Trade ; Northrup
The Alphabet Julen: The February '99 Bookpile is wellwritten, and manages to interweave economics, oral history, legal and financial describingthe minutitiae of a perilous game and the personages of the http://www.julen.net/books/0299.html
Extractions: THE FEBRUARY 1999 BOOKPILE The thing about Black History Month is that the bookstores feel no qualms about not showing great stuff off for eleven months of the year. Just watch, on March 2, finding Gwendolyn Brooks, Zora Neale Hurston's anthropological/folklife work, and great non-fiction will go back to being much, much harder. The Westing Game I'd been thinking about this childhood favorite for the past eight months or so, and had been looking for it off and on since. It stands up pretty well for an adult reader. The plot: twelve heirs of a rich old man move into a nearby condominium and set off on a race to solve the challenge set out in his will. The protagonist is a teenage girl, misunderstood and put-upon, but the story is filled with interesting characters and a decent mystery. An interesting subject, but poorly organized and written. The author kept getting in the way of my reading. His filters, his perceptions, his focus all felt off. I felt like I was waiting for him to catch up to what I already knew. Plus, he focused solely on the black and white Hairston descendents of the slave owners, and not necessarily the other slaves. It felt like he as trying to make too literal a point of "We are all each other's brothers." On the other hand, there are some fascinating stories he captures, particularly the ones he pulls out of historical records and oral tradition. However, Wiencek's purpose is too ambitious, and he glosses through history, trying to sum it all up in the experiences of isolated individuals. The reader is left with more questions than answers.
Some Philosophical Concepts Of Divinity Prophecy is future history revealed by god in advance to every legal system, evenGod's legal systems these three constitute three distinct personages and three http://www.godonthe.net/wbt/wbt_035.htm
Extractions: CONCEPTS OF DIVINITY This chapter explains some concepts of general theology. The Topics do not necessarily apply to Jehovah, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit of the Bible. None of the terms defined in this chapter refers to a specific religion or denomination except 'triune deity' and Replacement Theology. If you are reading this book from the beginning, you can skip this chapter initially. You will need to read about Pantheism for Chapter 40 and Deism for Chapter 50. Philosophers and those who study comparative religion have studied the concept of a divine being in the abstract. Various religions have different concepts of divine being(s). Christianity is monotheistic, not polytheistic, non-pantheistic and non-deistic. Those abstract concepts will now be explained, in preparation for a discussion of the omnipresence and personality of God. In this chapter 'God' refers to the God of Judaism and Christianity, whereas 'god' refers to either (a) the concept of a divine being in the abstract, e.g. "a god is superior to man", or (b) the being(s) worshipped by any non- Judeo-Christian religions. Torrey: no
Brno Foto History history of the Citta' di Brno. the city, that they are becomes to you the legal normfor The famous personages chehanno worked in the city include Leos Janacek http://www.alloggituristici.com/70193.php
Extractions: History of the Citta' di Brno Durantele wars of Hussite the city is remained faithful to King Zikmund, and the Hussites has left two times besieges to the city, in 1428 and 1430, is times in vano.I speeches before given a degree to has been held in Brno, that it has lead altrattato of Basle. In 1454 King Ladislav Pohrobek it has expelled the Hebrew dallacittà, and risistemati they in the area that is hour Krenova road. During regnodi the King Jiri di Podebrady supported Brno its adversary Matthias Corvinus, who in Moravia has been recognized like king of the Boemia. During both the civil wars in 15º the century, the number of buildings has fallen and the business ècaduto. Augustiniansin Brno: The monastico order Augustinian has been present in Brno from 1356. Ilprivilegio of foundation of the monastero Brno has been emitted from the margravio dwelled Jan Heinrich di Luxemburg. This has been confirmed in 1356 dalPope and because Brno has fallen under the Olomouc diocese, the bishop of Olomouc hadovuto also to give authorization to the monastero for being carried out in the cittàdal margravio of moravo elect. The monastero was outside constructed dallefortificazioni of city in the vicinity of the Reno door (to the entrance dellastrada Behounska today) and is known hour like the Mistodrzitelsky il(Governatore) palace. During the Josephine reforms in 1782 the transferred èstato monastero to previous the Cistercian convent in old Brno.
From Robertson's The Baconian Heresy drawing and bewildering their audiences by making their nonlegal personages useterms terms capable and incapable are used in Mores history of Richard http://www.sourcetext.com/lawlibrary/robertson/heresy3/06.htm
Extractions: SHAKESPEARE LAW LIBRARY Last Contents Next Lord Campbell's Case Part 6 26. Whereas some have argued that the conversation between Falstaff and the Chief Justice does not exhibit a close observation of the manner of speech of judges; Lord Campbell demonstrates that Lord Chancellor Jeffreys once actually did talk of laying a man "by the heels." He further delivers the judgment that the author who made Falstaff talk of "the wearing out of six fashions, which is four terms, or two actions," " must have been early initiated in the mysteries of terms and actions." So, it appears, was Greene, who in James IV (iii, 3) makes Andrew say that "dead" is "a terrible word at the latter end of a sessions," and further makes the Divine (v, 4) complain that the lawyers "delay your common pleas for years." And so must have been Dekker and Webster, since they make Justiniano in
Development Of Tibetan Studies objective evaluations of major historical events and personages. entries related togrammar, history, geography, poems in old Tibet, feudal legal codes, folklore http://www.chinaembassy.org.np/tibet/features/tibetology/development.htm
Extractions: Home Tibet Development of Tibetan Studies Research into Politics and Legal System. In the last decade or more, politics in Tibet, its legal status and its legal system have become new subjects for Tibetan studies. The legal status of Tibet, unequal "treaties" imposed upon Tibet, and local laws find their way into a number of academic papers and books, including the Legal Status of Tibet in History (a Chinese translation) by Li Tiezen, Concise History of British and Russian Invasion of China's Tibet by Zhou Weizhou, and Selected Legal Codes in Ancient Tibet by the Social Sciences Development research Center of the State Education Commission. Research into the Economic Development in Tibet. This is a new subject for Tibetan studies. This marks the development from economic and social investigation and research into the policies for economic development to studying strategy and theory for economic development. Social Formation and Historical Research.
Louis Brandeis Becomes First Jewish Member Of Supreme Court ; Categ PRINCIPAL personages Louis Dembitz Brandeis (18561941), a child of four months,the longest in the history of a radical threats to the American legal system. http://www.hamline.edu/~rkagan/Publications/Other Publications/brandeis.html
Extractions: PRINCIPAL PERSONAGES: Louis Dembitz Brandeis (1856-1941), a child of German Jewish immigrants, a brilliant attorney, a leader of the Progressive movement, an active Zionist, and an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1916-1939. Woodrow Wilson (1856-1924), a President whose policies for a New Freedom advocated social and economic justice. He nominated Louis Brandeis to introduce these views into the Supreme Court.
Blank author's collections A Constitutional and legal history of Medieval government work(legal or quasilegal), see Now one of many famous personages who failed http://www.oc.ca.gov/lawlib/newnews.htm
Extractions: EARLY ENGLISH HISTORY The Magna Carta established the idea that even the King is subject to law. This has been an important theme in English (and later American) political development. Impeachment provided a mechanism for Parliament to put this doctrine into practice. On a more practical note, it also gave the great lords of England a way of curbing the Kings power. Parliaments power to impeach extended to all Crown officials (including judges), all lords both spiritual (bishops) and temporal (dukes, earls, etc.) and all commons. Virtually any person within the English realm could be impeached. The actual origins of impeachment are quite old. Sir William Blackstone noted: "This is a custom derived to us from the constitution of the ancient Germans; who in their great councils sometimes tried capital accusations relating to the public...." The first impeachment occurred in 1376. This was a time when the distinction between Parliaments legislative and judicial functions were not clearly defined. Impeachment was originally a criminal procedure, but it evolved into a Parliamentary tool for removing Crown officials as well. An indictment against a royal official would have been impracticable since in England all courts and judges technically function under Crown authority. An "impeachment," however, was brought under the authority of the House of Commons, thereby circumventing the Kings courts.
Cantinflas - "Who's Who In History" (1982): Cantinflas a trip back in time to meet some of history's most famous personages. RT Licensing Movie List Celebs List Games List legal Disclaimer Privacy http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/CantinflasWhosWhoinHistory-1003487/about.php
Extractions: Go to Video ... TOP RENTALS * Maid in Manhattan * Jackass: The M... * Friday After Next NEW RELEASES * Paid in Full * Four Days in S... * Waking Up in Reno UPCOMING * Analyze That CURRENT RELEASES * Abandon * Bliss * Blue in the Face * Boys * The Cherry Orc... * City by the Sea - City of the Li... * City Slickers ... * Empire * Fear and Loath... * Femme Fatale * First Kid * The Four Feathers * Friday After Next * Full Frontal * Ghost Ship * Gone Fishin' * Half Past Dead * Heavy Metal * Howling III * I Spy * Jackass: The M... * Just a Kiss * Killing Me Softly * Knockaround Guys * Maid in Manhattan * Man from Elysi... * Mystic Masseur * Other Side of ... * Pokemon 4Ever * Rambo - First ... * Rambo III * Rules of Attra... * Sordid Lives * Stargate * Stealing Harvard * Swept Away * Swimfan * Truth About Ch... * The Tuxedo * Wasabi * The Weight of ... - Welcome Back, ... * Welcome to Col... Go To Section ... HOME MOVIES VIDEODVD GAMES SHOP Home Video/DVD Cantinflas - "Who's Who in History" (1982)