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Law and Philosophy in the Late Roman Republic

, 2021
The middle of the second until the middle of the first century BCE is one of the most creative periods in the history of human thought, and an important part of this was the interaction between Roman jurists and Hellenistic philosophers.
R. Brouwer
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CITIZENSHIP IN ROMAN LAW

2021
Europe, and Italy in particular, have been the recipients - in recent years - of intense migratory flows, which have required the attention of the legislator to address the problems arising from the phenomenon in question. An in-depth reflection is therefore required, aimed at reviewing the whole issue of immigration and proposing to verify the ...
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Roman Law

2014
During the Middle Ages, law loomed large in efforts to manage life situations, beginning with the adaptation of late imperial law to the successor or barbarian kingdoms of the West. Alongside local law and custom, the learned law was increasingly used to answer questions and settle disputes about family issues such as marriages and dowry, property and ...
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Sources of Roman Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
This chapter addresses the origin and development of Roman legal sources — that is, the methods and procedures for establishing new legally binding rules, standards, and norms. The source of a legal norm gives it ultimate validity. Legal sources can be classified in many different ways.
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Roman Law and Common Law

1952
Roman Law and Common Law was first published in 1936. The second edition, entirely reset, revised throughout and supplemented by Professor F. H. Lawson, Fellow of Brasenose College and Professor of Comparative Law in the University of Oxford, appeared in 1952. This was done at the suggestion of Lord McNair, who read the revised copy. Professor Lawson's
W. W. Buckland, Arnold D. McNair
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Finium Demonstratio

Journal of Roman Studies, 1957
Finium Demonstratio, D. Daube, Roman Law
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Roman Law, Fragment

2020
The fragment follows the division found in the Codex of Justinian in the Corpus Iuris Civilis, and it contains the same headings: the first visible rubric reads 'De accusationibus et inscriptionibus' (CJ.9.2.0), the last 'Ad legem iuliam maiestatis' (CJ.9.8.0).
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Roman Law

American Journal of Legal History, 1972
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Roman Law

The American Law Register (1898-1907), 1901
T. J. G., W. H. H. Kelke
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