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Geoffrey Hand Personal Papers Collection: Box 20 English Law

Material type: TextTextSeries: Hand CollectionSubject(s): DDC classification:
  • Geoffrey Hand Personal Papers Collection: Box 20
Summary: Lecture Notes on The Union of 1707 and the Union of 1800, Public Law in the English Tradition, Edward I, The Adolescence of Common Law, Photocopied book “Access to Justice: Interim Report to the Lord Chancellor on the civil justice system in England and Wales”, Cases from the High Court of Justice King’s Bench Division, Offprint of “The Equity of the King’s Court”, Notes on The Court of King’s Bench, Law Journal of Scotland, Review by G.H on Abbot’s Law reporting in England, Biographical details on William Blackstone by Ian Doolittle, Review on “Tyranny: A study in the abuse of power” by Maurice Latey, Review on “A Second Miscellany- at-law”, Article on the Selden Society’s importance “It wasn’t the Law that was the Ass”, Review by G.H for “The Law of treason in England in the later middle ages”
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Reference Carlow Campus Library Reference Geoffrey Hand Personal Papers Collection: Box 20 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not for loan 77060

Donated by Professor Geoffrey Hand, formerly professor of law in University College, Dublin, the European University Institute, Florence, and the University of Birmingham.

Lecture Notes on The Union of 1707 and the Union of 1800, Public Law in the English Tradition, Edward I, The Adolescence of Common Law, Photocopied book “Access to Justice: Interim Report to the Lord Chancellor on the civil justice system in England and Wales”, Cases from the High Court of Justice King’s Bench Division, Offprint of “The Equity of the King’s Court”, Notes on The Court of King’s Bench, Law Journal of Scotland, Review by G.H on Abbot’s Law reporting in England, Biographical details on William Blackstone by Ian Doolittle, Review on “Tyranny: A study in the abuse of power” by Maurice Latey, Review on “A Second Miscellany- at-law”, Article on the Selden Society’s importance “It wasn’t the Law that was the Ass”, Review by G.H for “The Law of treason in England in the later middle ages”

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