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Includes section "Books and publications."
An enumerative rather than descriptive bibliography which aims to record all published law report titles issued by British Commonwealth jurisdictions, whether primary (e.g. India) or subordinate (e.g. Punjab) that may be cited by lawyers for professional purposes. The arrangement is alphabetical by primary jurisdiction followed by subordinate jurisdiction. Within each jurisdiction the entries are arranged alphabetically by title with a second sequence listing reports which deal with particular subjects arranged under broad subject headings. Indexed by title, subject, and jurisdiction. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
The discontinuance of the publication "after the issue of the 3rd prox." [i.e. November 3, 1905] is announced in no. 50 and 51 of volume 5. This copy ends with no. 51, October 27, and the Index, dated November 3, does not contain any references to pages of a later date.
In the spring of 1920, a remarkable phenomenon occurred in Ireland: the people took over the administration of law and order in their own communities and turned their backs on the enforced British judicial system. It became international news. Small tribunals adjudicated in local disputes about land, the local Volunteer companies abducted and punished thieves and petty criminals, directed public order at race meetings and fair days, and in parts of the country burnt down the existing court houses. Retreat from Revolution is the first in-depth account of the courts system established by a Dáil decree in June 1920. Presided over by locally elected justices and attached to virtually every parish in the country for ready access, these Dáil courts soon displaced the largely abandoned British court system, on which people turned their backs. This is the true story of the Dáil Courts as told by the people involved – the litigants, the officials and the judges. Mary Kotsonouris vividly portrays the self-confidence of these men and women, their ability to create structure that answered their needs, and their keen appreciation of their place in the emerging democracy.
This first-of-its-kind volume surveys twenty constitutional judges who 'towered' over their peers, exploring their complexities and flaws.