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L'auteur relève que des situations paradoxales surviennent dans l'interaction des catégories juridiques dans le droit communautaire avec le droit des États membres. Cette étude en fait l'observation à partir de données tirées des droits intellectuels et du droit de la concurrence.
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Cet article est une revue des travaux de différents auteurs afin de classifier les obligations en common law.
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Ce texte parle de la relation entre le monde académique et les praticiens.
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Différents éléments entourent le texte d'un ouvrage. Ce sont, par exemple, le titre, la dédicace, la préface, les notes et les index. Ces éléments sont désignés sous l'appellation de « paratexte » par les théoriciens de la littérature. La présente étude s'intéresse aux éléments paratextuels les plus fréquemment rencontrés dans les ouvrages juridiques québécois parus entre 1775 et 1920. Les caractéristiques de ces éléments sont présentées en insistant sur leur finalité. La recherche montre...
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"The compiling of the Customaries, decided by the king in 1454, engages a long process of writing and interpretation of the Law. Mainly, this research is based on the minutes of assemblies assigned to compile the Customaries, who allow an analysis of the choices commanded by the writing of the Law: title and position of different chapters and articles of the Customary, interpretation of terms, search of a greater clarity of the text. The question of the seigneurial rights is in the debates's...
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Readers of this journal will be familiar with Lenore Rapkin's name. Lenore has solicited and edited feature articles for inclusion in Canadian Law Libraries for a number of years. In her business life, Lenore specializes in cataloguing at the McGill University Law Library. Recently she has been working on preparing a lexicon to assist both librarians and researchers to assign the most appropriate Library of Congress subject headings to Civil law publications. This lexicon will be published...
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In December 1996 Classification of Obligations formed the topic of one of a series of SPTL seminars under the general title of Pressing Problems in the Law. It may, perhaps, be asked quite why classification is a pressing problem, for it is by no means clear from the papers themselves that common lawyers have suddenly become more concerned about the internal structure of the 'seamless web'. Nevertheless the seminar was a valuable opportunity to reflect upon a subject that is at least a...
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"Professor Arthurs argues that with the growth and diversification of knowledge, the common body of knowledge that underpins a unified profession is becoming more difficult to sustain. The desire to know, the need to know and the resources to know have divided lawyers into subprofessions, increasingly defined by the non-lawyers with whom they work and the clienteles they serve, bound together- if at all-only by nostalgia and some residuum of self-interest."
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We take it for granted that law, whatever its tradition, forms some kind of system. When the research funding mechanisms of this Academy were reorganised recently, law was located by the Humanities Research Board, without any apparent dissent, in a category labelled 'systems of thought and belief'. All modern laws are systems in the sense that they form bodies of norms, with certain features and with recognised ways of making them and changing them.' My concern today is not with whether...
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In modern legal systems, common law and civil law alike, and their spread over many territories in several continents, are inconceivable without the input of Nutshells often written in far-off times and in far-away places. I also want to show that the history of Nutshells vividly illumines themes that I have pressed for decades.3 First, they demonstrate the easy transmissibility of legal rules, institutions, concepts and structures from one society to other, very different, ones. Second,...