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A Memorandum on Legal Research |
Document |
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Outline addressing court cases, the role of the court, and judicial limitations. |
Document |
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The Professions in American Life |
Working Paper |
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Rough draft of previous paper entitled "The Professions in American Life." |
Working Paper |
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Techniques of Judicial Decisions, as they Bear on the Distinctive Role of the United States Supreme Court, in a Changing World |
Working Paper |
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Sixty Years of Modern Administrative Law (dating from the Interstate Commerce Commission, 1887) in the Courts |
Document |
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Urbanization in re City Planning |
Document |
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Outline concerning the historical changes and directions that legislation has experienced. |
Document |
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Commercial Sponsorships for Political Convention Broadcasts |
Document |
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Outline covering the functions, debatable aspects, and responsibilities of a lobbyist. |
Document |
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Social Science On a Lawyer's Bookshelf |
Lecture Notes |
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Science, Scientists, and the Law |
Lecture Notes |
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Wisconsin Center Building: "Law in Society" |
Lecture Notes |
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Brown v. Board of Education |
Document |
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Why is it a Good Investment to Spend Money on a State University? |
Document |
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Opens with a correspondence from Marion Alderton (assistant to Dr. Willits of the University of Pennsylvania) regarding Hurst's revised manuscript of "Research Responsibilities of University Law Schools." |
Correspondence |
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Research Responsibilities of University Law Schools |
Working Paper |
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Short outline touching on post-Reconstruction legislation using the Washburn case as a specific example. |
Document |
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Outline for joint lecture by Hurst and Bunn in which they the cover various aspects of self-incrimination rights. |
Lecture Notes |
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Outline covering the nature of civil liberties and what this meant to society in 1954. |
Document |
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Outline that defines the term civil liberty and the government's role in preserving it. |
Document |
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Outline covering the importance of civil liberties within a secure legal system and the various questions/problems the existence of civil liberties raises. |
Document |
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Really Believe? |
Document |
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Benjamin Franklin, Louis Brandeis, and a speaker at the University of New York are quoted on their varying interpretations of civil liberties within a system of law. |
Document |
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A culmination of all previous outlines in this series, covering civil liberties in the context of private property, the indivisible nature of liberties, and the risks that are associated with it. |
Document |