Suffrage and Women's Writing (Historical Women's Writing)
This volume examines different types of women’s creative writing in support of the demand for the parliamentary vote, including autobiographies, memoirs, letters, diaries, novels, and drama. The women’s suffrage movement became far more visible in the Edwardian period. Large demonstrations and militant actions such as destruction of property were widely reported in the press and reached a wide audience. Eager to get their message across, suffrage campaigners not only took collective action but...
The Blue Guide helps to develop written communication skills and to demonstrate how effective writing is linked to leadership. These are valuable skills for veteran officers, future law enforcement practitioners and students who will ultimately pursue careers in other fields. The text uses authentic writing samples—dozens of sentences, paragraphs, and full documents submitted by current police officers— to promote student motivation and learning. The book is based upon a long-standing and...
The Ashgate Handbook of Legal Translation (Law, Language and Communication)
by Le Cheng and King Kui Sin
This volume investigates advances in the field of legal translation both from a theoretical and practical perspective, with professional and academic insights from leading experts in the field. Part I of the collection focuses on the exploration of legal translatability from a theoretical angle. Covering fundamental issues such as equivalence in legal translation, approaches to legal translation and the interaction between judicial interpretation and legal translation, the authors offer contribu...
What are the implications of comics for law? Tackling this question, On Comics and Legal Aesthetics explores the epistemological dimensions of comics and the way this once-maligned medium can help think about - and reshape - the form of law. Traversing comics, critical, and cultural legal studies, it seeks to enrich the theorisation of comics with a critical aesthetics that expands its value and significance for law, as well as knowledge more generally. It argues that comics' multimodality - its...
Just Memos (Aspen Coursebook)
by Laurel Currie Oates and Anne Enquist
Aspen Handbook for Legal Writers (Aspen Coursebook)
by Deborah E Bouchoux
Law, Judges and Visual Culture analyses how pictures have been used to make, manage and circulate ideas about the judiciary through a variety of media from the sixteenth century to the present. This book offers a new approach to thinking about and making sense of the important social institution that is the judiciary. In an age in which visual images and celebrity play key roles in the way we produce, communicate and consume ideas about society and its key institutions, this book provides the...
Since the days of Alexander the Great, Afghanistan's strategically significant lands have been fought over by foreign invaders. Today, as yet another generation risks life and limb in this inhospitable territory, an ever-rising death toll puts back under the spotlight almost daily the way the modern war in Afghanistan is being run, and demands answers. Drawing on over a hundred interviews with Afghan politicians, businessmen and ordinary people, and British, American and European diplomats and...
Drafting Copyright Exceptions (Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law, #51)
by Emily Hudson
Language and Law (Routledge English Language Introductions)
by Alan Durant and Janny H.C. Leung
Language plays an essential role both in creating law and in governing its implementation. Providing an accessible and comprehensive introduction to this subject, Language and Law: describes the different registers and genres that make up spoken and written legal language and how they develop over time;analyses real-life examples drawn from court cases from different parts of the world, illustrating the varieties of English used in the courtroom by speakers occupying different roles;addresses t...
From a master teacher and writer, a fully revised and updated edition of the results-oriented approach to legal writing that is clear, that persuades—and that WINS. More than almost any profession, the law has a deserved reputation for opaque, jargon-clogged writing. Yet forceful writing is one of the most potent weapons of legal advocacy. In this new edition of Writing to Win, Steven D. Stark, a former lecturer on law at Harvard Law School, who has inspired thousands of aspiring and practicing...
In this evocative study of the fall of the Mughal Empire and the beginning of the Raj, award-winning historian William Dalrymple uses previously undiscovered sources to investigate a pivotal moment in history. The last Mughal emperor, Zafar, came to the throne when the political power of the Mughals was already in steep decline. Nonetheless, Zafar—a mystic, poet, and calligrapher of great accomplishment—created a court of unparalleled brilliance, and gave rise to perhaps the greatest liter...
Guide to Latin in International Law
by Aaron X. Fellmeth and Maurice Horwitz
As knowledge of Latin continues to diminish, its frequent use in cases, textbooks, treaties, and scholarly works baffles law students, practitioners, and scholars alike. Many of the Latin terms commonly used by international lawyers are not included in some of the more popular law dictionaries. Terms and phrases included in modern dictionaries usually offer nothing more than a literal translation without sufficient explanation or context provided. The Guide to Latin in International Law provide...
From Simon & Schuster, Law in Modern Society is author Roberto Mangabeira Unger's criticism of social theory and definitive guide to contemporary legal theories. Roberto Unger's second book Law in Modern Society is quite the handful. The author discusses legal theories and the evolution our legal system to its current form.
Persuasive Writing for Lawyers and the Legal Profession (Analysis & skills)
by Louis J Sirico and Nancy L Schultz