Law, Liberty and the Constitution

Law, Liberty and the Constitution

Author: Harry Potter

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 364

ISBN-13: 178327011X

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A new approach to the telling of legal history, devoid of jargon and replete with good stories, which will be of interest to anyone wishing to know more about the common law - the spinal cord of the English body politic.


Constitutionalism

Constitutionalism

Author: Charles Howard McIlwain

Publisher: The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 172

ISBN-13: 1584775505

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Examines of the rise of constitutionalism from the "democratic strands" in the works of Aristotle and Cicero through the transitional moment between the medieval and the modern eras.


The English Constitution

The English Constitution

Author: Walter Bagehot

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Published: 1867

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13:

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There is a great difficulty in the way of a writer who attempts to sketch a living Constitution-a Constitution that is in actual work and power. The difficulty is that the object is in constant change. An historical writer does not feel this difficulty: he deals only with the past; he can say definitely, the Constitution worked in such and such a manner in the year at which he begins, and in a manner in such and such respects different in the year at which he ends; he begins with a definite point of time and ends with one also. But a contemporary writer who tries to paint what is before him is puzzled and a perplexed: what he sees is changing daily. He must paint it as it stood at some one time, or else he will be putting side by side in his representations things which never were contemporaneous in reality.


From Vienna to Chicago and Back

From Vienna to Chicago and Back

Author: Gerald Stourzh

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2010-02-15

Total Pages: 412

ISBN-13: 0226776387

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Spanning both the history of the modern West and his own five-decade journey as a historian, Gerald Stourzh’s sweeping new essay collection covers the same breadth of topics that has characterized his career—from Benjamin Franklin to Gustav Mahler, from Alexis de Tocqueville to Charles Beard, from the notion of constitution in seventeenth-century England to the concept of neutrality in twentieth-century Austria. This storied career brought him in the 1950s from the University of Vienna to the University of Chicago—of which he draws a brilliant picture—and later took him to Berlin and eventually back to Austria. One of the few prominent scholars equally at home with U.S. history and the history of central Europe, Stourzh has informed these geographically diverse experiences and subjects with the overarching themes of his scholarly achievement: the comparative study of liberal constitutionalism and the struggle for equal rights at the core of Western notions of free government. Composed between 1953 and 2005 and including a new autobiographical essay written especially for this volume, From Vienna to Chicago and Back will delight Stourzh fans, attract new admirers, and make an important contribution to transatlantic history.