| Management number | 232027882 | Release Date | 2026/06/18 | List Price | US$12.48 | Model Number | 232027882 | ||
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What should a judge do when he must hand down a ruling based on a law that he considers unjust or oppressive? This question is examined through a series of problems concerning unjust law that arose with respect to slavery in nineteenth-century America. "Cover's book is splendid in many ways. His legal history and legal philosophy are both first class. . . . This is for a change an interdisciplinary work that is a credit to both disciplines."-Ronald Dworkin Times Literary Supplement "Scholars should be grateful to Cover for his often brilliant illumination of tensions created in judges by changing eighteenth- and nineteenth-century jurisprudential attitudes and legal standards. . . An exciting adventure in interdisciplinary history."-Harold M. Hyman American Historical Review "A most articulate sophisticated and learned defense of legal formalism. . . Deserves and needs to be widely read."-Don Roper Journal of American History "An excellent illustration of the way in which a burning moral issue relates to the American judicial process. The book thus has both historical value and a very immediate importance."-Edwards A. Stettner Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science "A really fine book an important contribution to law and to history."-Louis H. Pollak Read more
| ISBN10 | 0300032528 |
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| ISBN13 | 978-0300032529 |
| Edition | Revised ed. |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS |
| Dimensions | 9.18 x 6.15 x 1.14 inches |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Print length | 335 pages |
| Publication date | September 10, 1984 |
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