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Estudios de Historia del Derecho

Esta serie se sumerge en el intrincado tapiz de la historia legal, examinando cuestiones cruciales y la evolución de los sistemas jurídicos a través de diversas culturas y épocas. Presenta una distinguida erudición tanto de académicos consolidados como emergentes, ofreciendo nuevas perspectivas sobre cómo el derecho ha moldeado las sociedades. Explore el legado perdurable del pensamiento legal y su profundo impacto en la trayectoria de la civilización humana.

Tax Law and Social Norms in Mandatory Palestine and Israel
Birthright Citizens
Taming the Past
Moral Contagion
Felony and the Guilty Mind in Medieval England
Almost Citizens

Orden recomendado de lectura

  • Almost Citizens

    • 291 páginas
    • 11 horas de lectura

    Almost Citizens traces the struggles over citizenship waged between US officials and Puerto Rican individuals, which led to a seismic constitutional shift away from citizenship, rights, and statehood, and toward racist imperial governance.

    Almost Citizens
  • Drawing on a wide array of sources, including plea rolls, guides for confessors, and popular literature of the era, this book argues that issues of mind were central to jurors' determinations of whether a particular defendant should be convicted, pardoned, or acquitted outright in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century England.

    Felony and the Guilty Mind in Medieval England
  • Moral Contagion

    • 266 páginas
    • 10 horas de lectura

    During the Antebellum era, thousands of free black sailors were arrested for violating the Negro Seamen Acts. In retelling the harrowing experiences of free black sailors, Moral Contagion highlights the central roles that race and international diplomacy played in the development of American citizenship.

    Moral Contagion
  • Taming the Past

    • 446 páginas
    • 16 horas de lectura

    A critical catalogue of how lawyers use history - as authority, as evocation of lost golden ages, as a nightmare to escape and as progress towards enlightenment.

    Taming the Past
  • Birthright Citizens

    • 248 páginas
    • 9 horas de lectura

    Explains the origins of the Fourteenth Amendment's birthright citizenship provision, as a story of black Americans' pre-Civil War claims to belonging.

    Birthright Citizens
  • Secession on Trial

    • 356 páginas
    • 13 horas de lectura

    This book focuses on the post-Civil War treason prosecution of Confederate President Jefferson Davis, which was seen as a test case on the major question that animated the Civil War: the constitutionality of secession. The case never went to trial because it threatened to undercut Union victory.

    Secession on Trial
  • Becoming Free, Becoming Black offers the first comparative study of law, race, and freedom in the Americas from the sixteenth to mid-nineteenth centuries. Slaveholders linked blackness and slavery in the law, but by the mid- nineteenth century the social meaning of blackness varied over time and under different legal regimes.

    Becoming Free, Becoming Black
  • Murder in the Shenandoah

    • 224 páginas
    • 8 horas de lectura

    Jessica K. Lowe tells the story of Commonwealth v. Crane, exposing deep rifts in post-Revolutionary Virginia and using it to unearth Revolutionary America's gripping debates over justice, criminal punishment, and equality before the law. She shows how post-Revolutionary Virginia was gripped by the question of what it means to make law 'sovereign'.

    Murder in the Shenandoah
  • The First Modern Risk

    • 335 páginas
    • 12 horas de lectura

    Examines Europe's first significant national policies on social welfare in the late nineteenth century, which saw regulation focused on workplace accidents and had major implications for state-society relations. Ideal for scholars in history and law with an interest in the welfare state, labor regulation, and occupational health.

    The First Modern Risk
  • How could enslaved women assert legal claims to personhood, wages, and virtue when the law regarded them as mere property? Fractional Freedoms tells the story of enslaved legal actors within the landscape of Hispanic urban slavery, focussing on women who were socially disadvantaged, economically active and extremely litigious.

    Studies in Legal History