Lectures on the Relation Between Law and Public Opinion in England During the Nineteenth CenturyLiberty Fund, 2008 - 420 strani This volume brings together a series of lectures A. V. Dicey first gave at Harvard Law School on the influence of public opinion in England during the nineteenth century and its impact on legislation. Dicey's lectures were accurate as a reflection of the anxieties felt by turn-of-the-century Benthamite Liberals in the face of Socialist and New Liberal challenges. A. V. Dicey (1835-1922) was an English jurist, Vinerian Professor of English Law at Oxford University, and author of, among other works, The Law of the Constitution. Richard VandeWetering is Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Western Ontario. Please note: This title is available as an ebook for purchase on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iTunes. |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 82
Stran xxvi
... English legislation and successive currents of opinion . The book is , in fact , an endeavour to bring the growth of English laws during a hundred years into connection with the course of English thought . It cannot claim to be a work ...
... English legislation and successive currents of opinion . The book is , in fact , an endeavour to bring the growth of English laws during a hundred years into connection with the course of English thought . It cannot claim to be a work ...
Stran 76
... English statesmen at any rate such abolition must have appeared both the easier and the safer course . The precedent of the Union with Scotland seemed decisive , and the success of the legislation of 1707 concealed not only the dangers ...
... English statesmen at any rate such abolition must have appeared both the easier and the safer course . The precedent of the Union with Scotland seemed decisive , and the success of the legislation of 1707 concealed not only the dangers ...
Stran 362
... English law , but of English habits and opin- ion . Macaulay laid down no rigid rule limiting the sphere of State intervention , but he clearly held that , as a matter of common sense , government had better in general undertake little ...
... English law , but of English habits and opin- ion . Macaulay laid down no rigid rule limiting the sphere of State intervention , but he clearly held that , as a matter of common sense , government had better in general undertake little ...
Vsebina
3 Development of legislative opinion in England slow | 3 |
Characteristics of Lawmaking Opinion in England | 14 |
Precise scope of lectures | 24 |
Avtorske pravice | |
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Lectures on the Relation Between Law & Public Opinion in England, During the ... Albert Venn Dicey Prikaz kratkega opisa - 1940 |
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action amendment assuredly authority belief Bentham Benthamite Benthamite liberalism Bill Church of England Churchmen classes collectivism Combination Act combination law common law conservatism constitution contract convictions Court Court of Chancery coverture creed democracy democratic Dicey Dissenters doctrine ecclesiastical effect employers enactments English law Englishmen equity established Evangelical existence extent fact factory faith favour France French happiness House of Lords ideas individualists influence interest James Mill John Mill judge-made law judges judicial legislation labour laissez faire law of England law of France lectures legislative opinion less liberty marriage married woman Married Women's Property matter Mill's modern moral nation nineteenth century Nonconformists object Parliament parliamentary persons political popular possessed principle of utility protection public opinion Radicals Reform Act regards religious revolution rule sentiment separate property social socialistic statute thought Tory toryism trade union truth utilitarian Vict Whigs whilst whole workmen