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  2. Julius Paulus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julius_Paulus

    Julius Paulus (Greek: Ἰούλιος Παῦλος; fl. 2nd century and 3rd century AD), often simply referred to as Paul in English, was one of the most influential and distinguished Roman jurists. He was also a praetorian prefect under the Roman Emperor Alexander Severus .

  3. Legal origins theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_origins_theory

    Operationally, the "legal origins" scholars assigned the majority of countries in the world to either the English-common law, the French-civil law, or one among the German, Scandinavian, and Socialist legal traditions and then they calculated correlations between these legal origins dummies and proxies for the aforementioned economic outcomes.

  4. Paul Craig (legal scholar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Craig_(legal_scholar)

    Paul Philip Craig, FBA (born 27 September 1951) is a British legal scholar, specialising in administrative and European Union law. He was Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford from 1998 to 2019, and is now emeritus professor .

  5. List of eponymous laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_eponymous_laws

    Fitts's law is a principle of human movement published in 1954 by Paul Fitts which predicts the time required to move from a starting position to a final target area. Fitts's law is used to model the act of pointing, both in the real world, e.g. with a hand or finger, and on a computer , e.g. with a mouse .

  6. Etymologiae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etymologiae

    But five years ago Pope John Paul II compounded his misfortune by proposing (evidently) to nominate [Isidore] as the patron saint of the internet. It was, indeed, a tempting choice. Isidore's Etymologies , published in 20 books after his death, was an encyclopedia of all human knowledge, glossed with his own derivations of the technical terms ...

  7. Paul McHugh (legal scholar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_McHugh_(legal_scholar)

    McHugh's work has primarily been in the field of common-law aboriginal rights, a topic on which he has published extensively. [1] He is recognised as an authority on the legal status of tribal peoples in North America and Australasia; as both a doctrinal scholar and as a legal historian, as well as writer on the 'politics of historiography.'

  8. Law Latin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_Latin

    Law Latin, sometimes written L.L. or L. Lat., [1] and sometimes derisively referred to as Dog Latin, [2] is a form of Latin used in legal contexts. While some of the vocabulary does come from Latin, many of the words and much of the vocabulary stem from English. [ 1 ]

  9. The Sources of English Law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sources_of_English_Law

    The Sources of English Law (as it is sometimes known) is an essay written by the German historian Heinrich Brunner and translated by others. In 1909, it was described as a "valuable survey of the sources and literature of English law". [1] In 1914, Winfield called it a "valuable" guide "to the materials of English law". [2]