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Development in Law and re Real Property |
Lecture Notes |
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Short synopsis of Hurst's assessment of Worker's Compensation |
Document |
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Correspondence from Thomas M. Jacobson, Milwaukee Attorney, to Hurst concerning garnishment before judgment laws. |
Correspondence |
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Booklet outlining unconstitutional aspects of the Garnishment Before Judgment Laws |
Document |
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Handwritten outline concerning the hierarchy of values, the university law school, public responses, legal processes, and benefits to the individual. |
Document |
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Workmen's Compensation |
Document |
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Workmen's Compensation Considered as A Creative Use of the Legal Process |
Document |
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General Situation of Research |
Document |
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A series of correspondences between Hurst and Professor Martin Ridge of Indiana University in 1968. |
Correspondence |
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Hurst's critique of Everyman's Constitution in light of its contribution to legal history. |
Document |
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Correspondence to Hurst from Raoul Berger announcing Berger's retirement and his acknowledgement of the Hurst's impact upon his work. |
Correspondence |
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United States Supreme Court School Segregation Cases: July 4, 1954 |
Document |
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Some Historical Perspectives on Anti-Trust Policy and Practice |
Lecture Notes |
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Changing Views of the Man in the Street About Law and Lawyers |
Document |
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Outline covering the profession of law and main currents of social change from 1790-1952, and the historical factors that contributed to these transitions. |
Document |
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Outline delineating the relation between law and society beginning in 1870 with a strong focus on institutions and the shift in societal attitudes. |
Lecture Notes |
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Developments in the Law re Real Property (Ratcliff Class, October, 1961) |
Lecture Notes |
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Short outline concerning law as an institution, its relation to other areas of society, and the involvement of value judgments. |
Document |
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Nature of Decision |
Document |
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Outline covering political parties and the various rifts between them |
Document |
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Legal History Should be Social History of Law |
Document |
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Why Legal History? |
Document |
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If Laymen too Narrow re Lit, Lawmen Haven't Led |
Document |
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Intangibles and Organization |
Document |
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Correspondence from Hurst to Professor William Tucker of Cornell Law School regarding an upcoming lecture that Hurst would give in Chicago on legal history and its relation to various professional student categories. |
Document |