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The Making of Modern Law (MOML):
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Kontakt/Bestellung |
Online |
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Verlag :: Publisher Gale Cengage |
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Preis :: Price Preise auf Anfrage / Prices on request |
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Das Angebot richtet sich nicht an Verbraucher i. S. d. § 13 BGB und Letztverbraucher i. S. d. PAngV. |
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Bestellnummer bei digento :: digento order number 107471 |
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Verlagsinformation :: Publisher's information The Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources II, 1763-1970 is a fully searchable digital archive of United States state and territorial codes, municipal codes, and constitutional conventions and compilations. This collection's easy-to-use search engine makes it possible to seek out one-time information throughout dozens of disparate texts, allowing for the thorough researching of nearly every aspect of American legal development. The term "primary sources" is used not in the historian's sense of a manuscript, letter or diary, but rather in the legal sense of a case, statute or regulation. The Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources, 1763-1970 brings together in one place many of the important documents that have been lost, destroyed, or previously inaccessible to researchers of American legal history around the world. Topics addresssed in this collection include: - Debate over slavery and race law after Reconstruction - Due process - Native American & U.S. Government relations - African Americans and women's right to vote - Progressive Era and New Deal legislation - Crime and punishment (penal codes) - Health and safety codes - Business and corproate law - Revenue and taxation - Welfare and labor - Military and veterans affairs - Education and school systems - Transportation - And so much more The Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources II, 1763-1970 was sourced from the Harvard Law School Library, the Yale Law Library, and the Law Library of Congress. The Making of Modern Law: Primary Sources II, 1763-1970 is cross-searchable with the first part of Primary Sources, The Making of Modern Law (MOML): Primary Sources, 1620-1926. These two archives combined afford users access to a collection of more than 3.3 million pages at their fingertips. |
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