Langlois, Charles-Victor and Charles Seignobos (1898) Introduction aux etudes histon'ques, Paris, Hachette. Larrere, Raphael (2002) 'Agriculture, artificialisation ou manipulation de la nature?' Cosmopolitiques, 1: 158—173.
In this startlingly original work, Jonathan Simon traces this pattern back to the collapse of the New Deal approach to governing during the 1960s when declining confidence in expert-guided government policies sent political leaders ...
Peter Blundell Jones This investigation began as one of a series of case studies exploring the links between architecture and ritual, looking at the way meanings are established and perpetuated through use and custom, with the aim of ...
... nevertheless the affluence of the crowd there was so great, that there was scarcely enough room for his operations. The most famous names were entered on the roster of his audience, Rohaut, Bernier, Auzout, Regis, Tournefort.
Gelman, Andrew, James Liebman, Valerie West and Alexander Kiss. 2004. “A Broken System: The Persistent Patterns of Reversals of Death ... Graham Burchell, Peter Miller, and Collin Gordon, pp. 1–52. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Allan Brodie, Jane croom, James O. Davies, English Prisons: An Architectural History ... See, for example, Graham Wallas, 'Jeremy Bentham', Political Science Quarterly, 38/1 (1923): 48.
Andrew Reid, London: J. Nourse, W. Strahan, J. & F. Rivington, T. Longman, T. Cadell & E. Johnston, 1775. Macquer, Pierre and Antoine Bawl* Plan d'un cours de chymie expérimentale et raison& avec un discours historique sur la chymie, ...
The actual work of running the Leadership Corps was carried out by the Chief of the Party Chancellery ( Hess , succeeded by Bormann ) assisted by the Party Reich Directorate , or Reichsleitung , which was composed of the Reichleiters ...
(Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1958), p. 7. 24. ... in The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology, edited by Langdon Winner, 19–39. Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1986. 29.
Recognizance bonds remain familiar to us through their role in the bail process . In the sixteenth century a suspect eligible for bail might obtain release by submitting to a written examination by two justices of the peace .
Holmes, F. L. (1971) 'Analysis by Fire and Solvent Extractions: The Metamorphosis of a Tradition' Isis 62: 129–148. Holmes, F. L. (1989) Eighteenth-century Chemistry as an Investigative Enterprise, Berkeley, Office for the History of ...
Moving Beyond Legal Realism Austin D. Sarat, Jonathan Simon. Review ? " 339 Nature 11 ( 1989 ) ; and Cecil L. Willis and ... 43 Lawrence Grossberg and Della Pollock , “ Editorial Statement , " 12 Cultural Studies no . 3 : 2 ( 1998 ) .
This volume introduces law students to the international legal instruments and case law governing the substantive and procedural dimensions of international human rights and humanitarian law, including economic, social, and cultural rights.
Socializing Security: Progressive Era Economists and the Origins of American Social Policy. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Murray, William E. 1997–98. “Homeowners Insurance Redlining: The Inadequacy of Federal Remedies and the ...
This book offers a provocative and brilliant reading to the end of mass incarceration.
“Controlling Chronic Misconduct in City Spaces: Of Panhandlers, Skid Rows, and Public-Space Zoning. ... “Street Stops and Broken Windows: Terry, Race and Disorder in New York City. ... Securing the Spectacular City: ...
“Infanticide and Abortion in Nineteenth-Century Britain.” Population Studies 32: 81–93. Ward, Ian. 2014. Sex, Crime and Literature in Victorian England. Oxford: Hart Publishing. Ward, Tony. 1999. “The Sad Subject of Infanticide: Law, ...
Malcolm Feeley's classic scholarship on courts, criminal justice, legal reform, and the legal complex, examined by law and society scholars.
The SAGE Handbook of Punishment and Society draws together this disparate and expansive field of punishment and society into one compelling new volume.
The story of the chemical revolution has usually been told by focusing on the small group of French chemists who championed Lavoisier's oxygen theory, or else his opponents.