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   Papers Presented: 
  The papers reproduced here are drafts and should not be
  cited without the permission of the author. 
  The format is .PDF.  If you
  cannot read that format on your computer, a reader may be downloaded from http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.htm. 
  S. Banks, A Most Peculiar View of
  Provocation: Gentlemen and the Judge, Directions in English Duelling Trials,
  1785-1842 
  Allen
  D. Boyer, Sir Edward Coke: Royal Servant and Royal Favorite 
  Paul Brand, Judges and
  Judging 1176-1307 
  Martin Burr, The Anglo-Saxon
  Judiciary 
  Kevin Costello, The regulation of the writ
  of certiorari to review summary criminal convictions, 1690-1848 
  Kelly De Luca, Lord Chancellor Ellesmere and the Law of Nations 
  Déirdre M. Dwyer, Developments in
  the Principles of Civil Evidence in Nineteenth Century England 
  Jeremy Finn, Innovation and Continuity:
  Statute Law of the Saorstat Eireann / Irish Free State 1922-1948 
  Adolfo Giuliani, Judicial Discretion in the Late ius commune 
  Paul Halliday, 11,000
  Prisoners: Habeas Corpus, 1500-1800 
  Phil
  Handler, Judges and the Criminal Law in England 1808-1861 
  D. Heirbaut, The Precursors of the
  Earliest Law Reports on the Continent as Sources about the Spokesmen, the
  Forgotten Experts of Customary Law 
  Adam Hofri-Winogradow, ‘Moloch and Belial of the Bar’: Chancellors
  Thurlow and Loughborough and the late eighteenth century Chancery judiciary 
  Jula Hughes, Codification As Judicial
  Empowerment – The Stephen Code 
  Joanna Innes, The Judge and
  the Carpenter 
  James Jaffe,
  The Limits of Justice and Fairness: Expanding the Scope of Arbitration in
  Britain and India during the Late Eighteenth and Early Nineteenth Centuries 
  Susanne Jenks, Judges as
  Litigants in the 15th century 
  Michael de L. Landon, The Short-Term
  Impact of the Glorious Revolution on the English Judicial System 
  Randall Lesaffer and Erik-Jan Broers, Private Property in the Dutch-Spanish Peace
  Treaty of Münster (30 January 1648) 
  Mark Lunney, Federation, Fare Dodging and False Imprisonment – Mr
  Robertson’s Evening Out 
  John
  McLaren, Conflicts of Ideology and Crises of Conscience: The Disciplining of
  Judges in the 19th Century British Empire 
  Ulrike Muessig, Superior Courts in
  Early-Modern France, England and the Holy Roman Empire 
  Michael Nash, The Removal of Judges under the Act of Settlement (1701) 
  Ruth Paley, A matter of Judgement: Politics, Law and the
  Trial of Bishop Thomas Watson 
  Karen Pearlston, Judging the Judges: Mansfield and Kenyon on Coverture 
  Susan
  Priest, Australia’s Early High Court, The Fourth Commonwealth
  Attorney-General And the ‘Strike of 1905’ 
  Rebecca
  Probert, Sir William Scott and the Law of Marriage 
  Jonathan Rose, The
  Law of Maintenance: The Judicial Development of the Law 
  David J. Seipp, Formalism and Realism in
  Fifteenth-Century English Law: Bodies Corporate and Bodies Natural 
  A.J.B. Sirks, The Supreme Court of Holland
  and Zeeland judging cases in the early 18th century 
  Carla
  Spivack, The Trial of Mary Carleton (1663) 
  Chantal
  Stebbings, Bureaucratic
  Adjudication: the Internal Appeals of the Inland Revenue 
  Michael Ashley Stein, Victorian Tort Liability for Workplace
  Injuries 
  Warren
  Swain, Lord Mansfield and Lord Denning:
  Some Pitfalls AND Possibilities Presented by the Great Judge Approach to
  Legal History and the Law of Contract 
  Joshua C. Tate, The Third Lateran Council and the Ius Patronatus in
  England 
  Joshua C. Tate, The Third Lateran
  Council and the Ius Patronatus in England (revised) 
  C.H. van Rhee, Civil Litigation in Twentieth Century Europe 
  Christopher Waldrep, Judges and Judging in
  the American South: Challenging the All‐White Jury System in Mississippi, 1900‐1910 
  David V Williams, Judges
  and Judging in Colonial New Zealand: 1846-1912 
  Ian Williams, Early-Modern Judges and the
  Practice of Precedent 
    
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