Legal culture in the United States:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Abingdon, Oxon
Routledge
2016
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | UER01 Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes index. - Description based upon print version of record. - Literature |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource |
ISBN: | 9781317245544 9781315629940 |
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505 | 8 | |a Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Foreword; Preface: Seeing Law through the Reference Frames of Culture; 1 The Goal: Knowing the Soul and Spirit of U.S. Legal Culture through the Experience of the Common Law; 1.1 Framing Issues; 1.1.1 Spirit; 1.1.2 Soul; 1.1.3 The Spirit and the Soul of Advocacy; 1.2 Conclusions from Experience; Literature; 2 The Always and Already Comparative Nature of "Foreign" Law; Framing Issues; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Cognitive Status Quo; 2.2.1 Why Compare? A Brief History of Comparative Law; 2.2.2 Comparative Method | |
505 | 8 | |a 2.2.3 Functionality2.2.4 How to Compare; 2.2.5 What Comparative Law Is Not; 2.2.6 Further Critiques That Generate New Schools of Comparativism; 2.3 Conclusions-What Is Learned or Gained from Comparative Science?; Literature; 3 Comparative Law Applied: The Subtle Differences Between Civil Law and Common Law in Study and Practice; Framing Issues; 3.1 Why Compare Common Law with Civil Law?; 3.1.1 What Should One Compare? The Range from Hand to Math; 3.1.2 Comparing Institutions; 3.1.3 Comparing Processes; 3.1.4 Comparing Sources ... from the Bottom up; 3.2 A Note on Case Decisions | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.3 Comparisons within the Family: English Law and U.S. LawLiterature; 4 The Historical Reference Frame of "Kingless Commonwealths on the Other Shore of the Atlantic"1; Framing Issues; 4.1 The Problems of History; 4.2 Framing the Questions of History, U.S. History and U.S. Legal History; 4.2.1 The Static View; 4.2.2 The Circular or Cyclical View; 4.2.3 The Progressive or Enlightenment View; 4.2.4 The Spiral View; 4.2.5 The Cataclysmic View; 4.2.6 The Regressive View; 4.3 Proceeding from the Assumptions in the Various Views; 4.4 The Use and Abuse of History | |
505 | 8 | |a 4.5 Punished by Places and by Times: Establishing an Historical Narrative for U.S. Law4.5.1 The Birth of the Common Law; 4.5.2 Early Period: Eleventh-Thirteenth Centuries; 4.5.3 Middle Period: 1340s-1640s; 4.5.4 The Modern Period: The Eighteenth Century Until Today; 4.6 U.S. History; 4.7 U.S. Legal History; 4.8 Conclusion; Literature; 5 The Social Reference Frame: Cultural Practices We Call "Law"; Framing Issues; 5.1 Introduction: Does Society Want Legal Specialists?; 5.1.1 The Social Approach to the Legal Actors; 5.1.2 Legal Practice and Training in the United States | |
505 | 8 | |a 5.1.3 U.S. Legal Education and Practice Immediately After Independence5.1.4 General Considerations for Admission to the Practice of Law; 5.1.5 Legal Education in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries; 5.2 The United States Today: Entry into the Profession of Practicing Law; 5.3 Foreign Lawyer Practice in the United States (LL.M. and Foreign Legal Advisor); 5.4 Legal Science; 5.5 Lawyers and Law Students by the Numbers; 5.5.1 Gender; 5.5.2 Race; 5.6 A New Millennium for Common Law Education, A New Century for U.S. Legal Education; 5.7 Conclusion: Are the Horses in the Street Frightened Yet? | |
650 | 4 | |a Law / United States / Methodology | |
650 | 4 | |a Culture and law / United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Justice, Administration of / Social aspects / United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Adversary system (Law) / Social aspects / United States | |
650 | 4 | |a Sociological jurisprudence / United States | |
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650 | 7 | |a LAW / General Practice |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LAW / Jurisprudence |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LAW / Paralegals & Paralegalism |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LAW / Practical Guides |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LAW / Reference |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 4 | |a Gesellschaft | |
650 | 4 | |a Recht | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Titel: Legal culture in the United States
Autor: Junker, Kirk W
Jahr: 2016
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements ix
Foreword xi
Preface: Seeing Law through the Reference Frames of Culture xiii
The Exigency xiii
Using the Word Culture and a Sense of Orientation xv
The Law as Culture Category xviii
Using the Words United States xx
Reference Frames xxi
Framing Issues and Checking, Furthering and Challenging
Your Understanding xxiv
1 The Goal: Knowing the Soul and Spirit of U.S. Legal
Culture through the Experience of the Common Law 1
1.1 Framing Issues 1
1.1.1 Spirit 5
1.1.2 Soul 6
1.1.3 The Spirit and the Soul ofAdvocacy 6
1.2 Conclusions from Experience 8
2 The Always and Already Comparative Nature of
Foreign Law 11
2.1 Introduction 11
2.2 Cognitive Status Quo 14
2.2.1 Why Compare? A Brief History of Comparative Law 15
2.2.2 Comparative Method 21
2.2.3 Functionality 22
vi Contents
2.2.4 How to Compare 26
2.2.5 What Comparative Law Is Not 27
2.2.6 Further Critiques That Generate New Schools of
Comparativism 28
2.3 Conclusions—What Is Learned or Gained from
Comparative Science? 34
3 Comparative Law Applied: The Subtle Differences Between
Civil Law and Common Law in Study and Practice 41
3.1 Why Compare Common Law with Civil Law? 41
3.1.1 What Should One Compare? The Range from
Hand to Math 42
3.1.2 Comparing Institutions 46
3.1.3 Comparing Processes 50
3.1.4 Comparing Sources ... from the Bottom up 55
3.2 A Note on Case Decisions 61
3.3 Comparisons within the Family: English Law
and U.S. Law 62
4 The Historical Reference Frame of Kingless
Commonwealths on the Other Shore of the Atlantic 68
4.1 The Problems of History 69
4.2 Framing the Questions of History, U.S. History and
U.S. Legal History 71
4.2.1 The Stade View 73
4.2.2 The Circular or CyclicalView 73
4.2.3 The Progressive or Enlightenment View 74
4.2.4 The SpiralView 75
4.2.5 The CataclysmicView 75
4.2.6 The Regressive View 76
4.3 Proceedingfiom the Assumptions in the Various Views 76
4.4 The Use and Abuse of History 77
4.5 Pmished by Places and by Times: Establishing an Historical
Narrativefor U.S. Law 78
4.5.1 The Birth of the Common Law 80
4.5.2 Early Period: Eleventh-Thirteenth Centuries 82
4.5.3 Middle Period: 1340s-1640s 85
4.5.4 The Modern Period: The Eighteenth Century
Until Today 87
4.6 U.S. History 89
4.7 U.S. Legal History 90
4.8 Conclusion 93
Contents vll
5 The Social Reference Frame: Cultural Practices
We Call Law
5.1 Introduction: Does Society Weint Legal Specialists?
5.1.1 The Social Approach to the Legal Actors
5.1.2 Legal Practice and Training in the United States
5.1.3 U.S. Legal Education and Practice Immediately
After Independence
5.1.4 General Considerations for Admission to the
Practice of Law
5.1.5 Legal Education in the twentieth and
twenty-first centuries
5.2 The United States Today: Entry into the Profession of
Practicing Law
5.3 Foreign Lawyer Practice in the United States (LL.M. and
Foreign Legal Advisor)
5.4 Legal Science
5.5 Lawyers and Law Students hy the Numbers
5.5.1 Gender
5.5.2 Race
5.6 A New Millennium for Common Law Education, A New Century
for U.S. Legal Education 122
5.7 Conclusion: Are the Horses in the Street FrightenedYet? 126
6 The Language Reference Frame 128
6.1 Introduction and Outline 128
6.2 Law and Literature 132
6.3 Linguistics: Making Meaning through Language 136
6.4 Rhetoric 144
6.5 Philosophy of Language 156
6.6 Conclusions 159
7 The Philosophy Reference Frame 162
7.1 Philosophy, Legal Philosophy and American Legal
Philosophy 162
7.2 Making Meaning through Definition 164
7.2.1 Making Meaning through Etymology 164
7.2.2 Philosophical Method 165
7.2.3 Schools of Philosophy in the Study and
Practice of Law 165
7.3 What Are the Attributes of American Philosophy? 167
7.3.1 Realism, Pragmatism and Positivism 167
7.3.2 Critical Legal Studies 171
95
95
101
102
102
105
108
112
113
118
119
120
121
vlii Contents
7.3.3 Rationalism v. Empiricism in U.S. Adversarial
Trial Practice 173
7.4 Conclusions: Philosophy for the Future 174
8 The Disciplinary Reference Frame 177
8.1 Introduction 177
8.2 The Method of the Legal Discipline: More Than Textual Exegesis? 180
8.3 The Substance of the Legal Discipline: Attitüde? 184
8.4 Patting Notions o/Text and Science Together 187
8.5 Putting Notions of Practice and Art Together 190
8.6 Conclusion 195
9 The Mechanistic Reference Frame 198
9.1 Mechanics 198
9.2 Discovery 200
9.3 Lay Juries 203
9.4 The Trial 207
9.5 The Doctrine of Stare Decisis 210
9.6 Federalism 215
9.6.1 Federalism in the Making of Law 215
9.6.2 Federalism and the Practice of Law 217
9.6.3 What Law Applies to a Conflict—Federal or State? 219
9.6.4 Federalism and State Relations to Other States 220
9.7 Conclusions 221
Index
223
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Junker, Kirk W. 1959- |
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bvnumber | BV043478629 |
classification_rvk | PL 728 PU 5300 |
collection | ZDB-38-EBR ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Foreword; Preface: Seeing Law through the Reference Frames of Culture; 1 The Goal: Knowing the Soul and Spirit of U.S. Legal Culture through the Experience of the Common Law; 1.1 Framing Issues; 1.1.1 Spirit; 1.1.2 Soul; 1.1.3 The Spirit and the Soul of Advocacy; 1.2 Conclusions from Experience; Literature; 2 The Always and Already Comparative Nature of "Foreign" Law; Framing Issues; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Cognitive Status Quo; 2.2.1 Why Compare? A Brief History of Comparative Law; 2.2.2 Comparative Method 2.2.3 Functionality2.2.4 How to Compare; 2.2.5 What Comparative Law Is Not; 2.2.6 Further Critiques That Generate New Schools of Comparativism; 2.3 Conclusions-What Is Learned or Gained from Comparative Science?; Literature; 3 Comparative Law Applied: The Subtle Differences Between Civil Law and Common Law in Study and Practice; Framing Issues; 3.1 Why Compare Common Law with Civil Law?; 3.1.1 What Should One Compare? The Range from Hand to Math; 3.1.2 Comparing Institutions; 3.1.3 Comparing Processes; 3.1.4 Comparing Sources ... from the Bottom up; 3.2 A Note on Case Decisions 3.3 Comparisons within the Family: English Law and U.S. LawLiterature; 4 The Historical Reference Frame of "Kingless Commonwealths on the Other Shore of the Atlantic"1; Framing Issues; 4.1 The Problems of History; 4.2 Framing the Questions of History, U.S. History and U.S. Legal History; 4.2.1 The Static View; 4.2.2 The Circular or Cyclical View; 4.2.3 The Progressive or Enlightenment View; 4.2.4 The Spiral View; 4.2.5 The Cataclysmic View; 4.2.6 The Regressive View; 4.3 Proceeding from the Assumptions in the Various Views; 4.4 The Use and Abuse of History 4.5 Punished by Places and by Times: Establishing an Historical Narrative for U.S. Law4.5.1 The Birth of the Common Law; 4.5.2 Early Period: Eleventh-Thirteenth Centuries; 4.5.3 Middle Period: 1340s-1640s; 4.5.4 The Modern Period: The Eighteenth Century Until Today; 4.6 U.S. History; 4.7 U.S. Legal History; 4.8 Conclusion; Literature; 5 The Social Reference Frame: Cultural Practices We Call "Law"; Framing Issues; 5.1 Introduction: Does Society Want Legal Specialists?; 5.1.1 The Social Approach to the Legal Actors; 5.1.2 Legal Practice and Training in the United States 5.1.3 U.S. Legal Education and Practice Immediately After Independence5.1.4 General Considerations for Admission to the Practice of Law; 5.1.5 Legal Education in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries; 5.2 The United States Today: Entry into the Profession of Practicing Law; 5.3 Foreign Lawyer Practice in the United States (LL.M. and Foreign Legal Advisor); 5.4 Legal Science; 5.5 Lawyers and Law Students by the Numbers; 5.5.1 Gender; 5.5.2 Race; 5.6 A New Millennium for Common Law Education, A New Century for U.S. Legal Education; 5.7 Conclusion: Are the Horses in the Street Frightened Yet? |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-38-EBR)ebr11161451 (OCoLC)969783459 (DE-599)BVBBV043478629 |
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geographic_facet | USA |
id | DE-604.BV043478629 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:26:49Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781317245544 9781315629940 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-028895438 |
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physical | 1 Online-Ressource |
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publishDate | 2016 |
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publisher | Routledge |
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spelling | Junker, Kirk W. 1959- Verfasser (DE-588)113073126X aut Legal culture in the United States Kirk W. Junker Abingdon, Oxon Routledge 2016 1 Online-Ressource txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Includes index. - Description based upon print version of record. - Literature Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Foreword; Preface: Seeing Law through the Reference Frames of Culture; 1 The Goal: Knowing the Soul and Spirit of U.S. Legal Culture through the Experience of the Common Law; 1.1 Framing Issues; 1.1.1 Spirit; 1.1.2 Soul; 1.1.3 The Spirit and the Soul of Advocacy; 1.2 Conclusions from Experience; Literature; 2 The Always and Already Comparative Nature of "Foreign" Law; Framing Issues; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Cognitive Status Quo; 2.2.1 Why Compare? A Brief History of Comparative Law; 2.2.2 Comparative Method 2.2.3 Functionality2.2.4 How to Compare; 2.2.5 What Comparative Law Is Not; 2.2.6 Further Critiques That Generate New Schools of Comparativism; 2.3 Conclusions-What Is Learned or Gained from Comparative Science?; Literature; 3 Comparative Law Applied: The Subtle Differences Between Civil Law and Common Law in Study and Practice; Framing Issues; 3.1 Why Compare Common Law with Civil Law?; 3.1.1 What Should One Compare? The Range from Hand to Math; 3.1.2 Comparing Institutions; 3.1.3 Comparing Processes; 3.1.4 Comparing Sources ... from the Bottom up; 3.2 A Note on Case Decisions 3.3 Comparisons within the Family: English Law and U.S. LawLiterature; 4 The Historical Reference Frame of "Kingless Commonwealths on the Other Shore of the Atlantic"1; Framing Issues; 4.1 The Problems of History; 4.2 Framing the Questions of History, U.S. History and U.S. Legal History; 4.2.1 The Static View; 4.2.2 The Circular or Cyclical View; 4.2.3 The Progressive or Enlightenment View; 4.2.4 The Spiral View; 4.2.5 The Cataclysmic View; 4.2.6 The Regressive View; 4.3 Proceeding from the Assumptions in the Various Views; 4.4 The Use and Abuse of History 4.5 Punished by Places and by Times: Establishing an Historical Narrative for U.S. Law4.5.1 The Birth of the Common Law; 4.5.2 Early Period: Eleventh-Thirteenth Centuries; 4.5.3 Middle Period: 1340s-1640s; 4.5.4 The Modern Period: The Eighteenth Century Until Today; 4.6 U.S. History; 4.7 U.S. Legal History; 4.8 Conclusion; Literature; 5 The Social Reference Frame: Cultural Practices We Call "Law"; Framing Issues; 5.1 Introduction: Does Society Want Legal Specialists?; 5.1.1 The Social Approach to the Legal Actors; 5.1.2 Legal Practice and Training in the United States 5.1.3 U.S. Legal Education and Practice Immediately After Independence5.1.4 General Considerations for Admission to the Practice of Law; 5.1.5 Legal Education in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries; 5.2 The United States Today: Entry into the Profession of Practicing Law; 5.3 Foreign Lawyer Practice in the United States (LL.M. and Foreign Legal Advisor); 5.4 Legal Science; 5.5 Lawyers and Law Students by the Numbers; 5.5.1 Gender; 5.5.2 Race; 5.6 A New Millennium for Common Law Education, A New Century for U.S. Legal Education; 5.7 Conclusion: Are the Horses in the Street Frightened Yet? Law / United States / Methodology Culture and law / United States Justice, Administration of / Social aspects / United States Adversary system (Law) / Social aspects / United States Sociological jurisprudence / United States LAW / Essays bisacsh LAW / General Practice bisacsh LAW / Jurisprudence bisacsh LAW / Paralegals & Paralegalism bisacsh LAW / Practical Guides bisacsh LAW / Reference bisacsh Gesellschaft Recht Rechtsvergleich (DE-588)4115712-6 gnd rswk-swf USA USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Rechtsvergleich (DE-588)4115712-6 s 1\p DE-604 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Hardcover 9781138642454 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe, Paperback 9781138194304 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028895438&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Junker, Kirk W. 1959- Legal culture in the United States Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Acknowledgements; Foreword; Preface: Seeing Law through the Reference Frames of Culture; 1 The Goal: Knowing the Soul and Spirit of U.S. Legal Culture through the Experience of the Common Law; 1.1 Framing Issues; 1.1.1 Spirit; 1.1.2 Soul; 1.1.3 The Spirit and the Soul of Advocacy; 1.2 Conclusions from Experience; Literature; 2 The Always and Already Comparative Nature of "Foreign" Law; Framing Issues; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Cognitive Status Quo; 2.2.1 Why Compare? A Brief History of Comparative Law; 2.2.2 Comparative Method 2.2.3 Functionality2.2.4 How to Compare; 2.2.5 What Comparative Law Is Not; 2.2.6 Further Critiques That Generate New Schools of Comparativism; 2.3 Conclusions-What Is Learned or Gained from Comparative Science?; Literature; 3 Comparative Law Applied: The Subtle Differences Between Civil Law and Common Law in Study and Practice; Framing Issues; 3.1 Why Compare Common Law with Civil Law?; 3.1.1 What Should One Compare? The Range from Hand to Math; 3.1.2 Comparing Institutions; 3.1.3 Comparing Processes; 3.1.4 Comparing Sources ... from the Bottom up; 3.2 A Note on Case Decisions 3.3 Comparisons within the Family: English Law and U.S. LawLiterature; 4 The Historical Reference Frame of "Kingless Commonwealths on the Other Shore of the Atlantic"1; Framing Issues; 4.1 The Problems of History; 4.2 Framing the Questions of History, U.S. History and U.S. Legal History; 4.2.1 The Static View; 4.2.2 The Circular or Cyclical View; 4.2.3 The Progressive or Enlightenment View; 4.2.4 The Spiral View; 4.2.5 The Cataclysmic View; 4.2.6 The Regressive View; 4.3 Proceeding from the Assumptions in the Various Views; 4.4 The Use and Abuse of History 4.5 Punished by Places and by Times: Establishing an Historical Narrative for U.S. Law4.5.1 The Birth of the Common Law; 4.5.2 Early Period: Eleventh-Thirteenth Centuries; 4.5.3 Middle Period: 1340s-1640s; 4.5.4 The Modern Period: The Eighteenth Century Until Today; 4.6 U.S. History; 4.7 U.S. Legal History; 4.8 Conclusion; Literature; 5 The Social Reference Frame: Cultural Practices We Call "Law"; Framing Issues; 5.1 Introduction: Does Society Want Legal Specialists?; 5.1.1 The Social Approach to the Legal Actors; 5.1.2 Legal Practice and Training in the United States 5.1.3 U.S. Legal Education and Practice Immediately After Independence5.1.4 General Considerations for Admission to the Practice of Law; 5.1.5 Legal Education in the Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries; 5.2 The United States Today: Entry into the Profession of Practicing Law; 5.3 Foreign Lawyer Practice in the United States (LL.M. and Foreign Legal Advisor); 5.4 Legal Science; 5.5 Lawyers and Law Students by the Numbers; 5.5.1 Gender; 5.5.2 Race; 5.6 A New Millennium for Common Law Education, A New Century for U.S. Legal Education; 5.7 Conclusion: Are the Horses in the Street Frightened Yet? Law / United States / Methodology Culture and law / United States Justice, Administration of / Social aspects / United States Adversary system (Law) / Social aspects / United States Sociological jurisprudence / United States LAW / Essays bisacsh LAW / General Practice bisacsh LAW / Jurisprudence bisacsh LAW / Paralegals & Paralegalism bisacsh LAW / Practical Guides bisacsh LAW / Reference bisacsh Gesellschaft Recht Rechtsvergleich (DE-588)4115712-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4115712-6 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Legal culture in the United States |
title_auth | Legal culture in the United States |
title_exact_search | Legal culture in the United States |
title_full | Legal culture in the United States Kirk W. Junker |
title_fullStr | Legal culture in the United States Kirk W. Junker |
title_full_unstemmed | Legal culture in the United States Kirk W. Junker |
title_short | Legal culture in the United States |
title_sort | legal culture in the united states |
topic | Law / United States / Methodology Culture and law / United States Justice, Administration of / Social aspects / United States Adversary system (Law) / Social aspects / United States Sociological jurisprudence / United States LAW / Essays bisacsh LAW / General Practice bisacsh LAW / Jurisprudence bisacsh LAW / Paralegals & Paralegalism bisacsh LAW / Practical Guides bisacsh LAW / Reference bisacsh Gesellschaft Recht Rechtsvergleich (DE-588)4115712-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Law / United States / Methodology Culture and law / United States Justice, Administration of / Social aspects / United States Adversary system (Law) / Social aspects / United States Sociological jurisprudence / United States LAW / Essays LAW / General Practice LAW / Jurisprudence LAW / Paralegals & Paralegalism LAW / Practical Guides LAW / Reference Gesellschaft Recht Rechtsvergleich USA |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028895438&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT junkerkirkw legalcultureintheunitedstates |