01358 2200217 4500001002100000005001500021008004100036020001800077035001900095041000800114082001000122084001600132100001800148245003300166250000600199260004600205300003200251500002000283520081600303650002101119INLIS00000000000390720200508202510200508||||||||| | ||| |||| ||eng|| a81-7534-481-4 0010-0520003907 aeng0 a340.1 a340.1/JEN/M0 aIvor Jennings00aModern Theories Of Law 06880 a1 aNew DelhibUniversal Law Publishingc2005 aV,227hal . ; 21.cm.c21.cm. aIndeks : Indeks aThis book contains the text of ten public lectures delivered at the London School of Economics and Political Science during the Lent and Summer Terms of 1932. English law is so complex and technical that the Law Faculties have been compelled to emphasize technique at the expense of the broader problems which underly the modern legal systems. But since legal theory is common to jurisprudence, political science, and sociology, several members of the staff of the London School of Economics and Political Science have been compelled to devote considerable attention to it, and it appeared to some of us that in the absence of an adequate literature on modern legal theory a course of public lectures would make available to students some of the ideas which the legal philosophers have expounded in recent years 0a1. jurisprudence