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OAH Magazine of History, 1988
Provides a lesson plan designed to help students better understand the concept of a constitution, distinguish constitutional law from statutory law, and recognize examples of constitutional government. (BSR)
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Governmental Structure, Laws
Furlong, Partick J.; And Others – 1987
These lectures, presented in observance of the U.S. Constitution bicentennial celebration, consider selected constitutionally significant law cases that occurred in Indiana. These cases are representative of U.S. constitutional development and of the relationship of Indiana to the U.S. Constitution. Patrick Furlong, in "The South Bend…
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Laws, Local Issues
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Friedman, Lawrence M. – History Teacher, 1983
Discussed are three periods of American legal history: the period of doctrinal history before 1950, the age of the Wisconsin school, and the period of the Critical school. (RM)
Descriptors: Laws, United States History
Hood, William R. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1923
The material presented in this bulletin has been brought together for publication in response to a very considerable demand for information relative to the use of the Bible in public schools. This demand has been evidenced in recent years by many letters addressed to the Bureau of Education and designed to ascertain what laws the several States…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Biblical Literature, Laws, Religious Factors
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Anderson, Douglas A. – Journalism Quarterly, 1979
Considers the way in which Drew Pearson--who was involved in more than 100 libel actions during his reporting career--fared in the courts and was affected by the ever-evolving libel law. (GT)
Descriptors: Civil Liberties, Constitutional Law, Court Litigation, Freedom of Speech
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Sokoloff, Burton Z. – Future of Children, 1993
Traces the evolution of adoption from colonial times to the present, discussing the placement of children as servants in the eighteenth century, the implementation of a legal framework for adoption in the nineteenth century, and the present system of private and public adoption agencies. (MDM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adoption, Children, History
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Snyderman, Mark; Herrnstein, R. J. – American Psychologist, 1983
An examination of the historical record fails to uncover any support for the claim that the racially biased Immigration Act of 1924 was passed with the help of the intelligence testing community. (GC)
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Laws, Nature Nurture Controversy, Psychologists
Culver, David M. – New England Social Studies Bulletin, 1983
In the early nineteenth century, Boston was a small, pleasant seaport, but the large influx of immigrants after 1840 led to overcrowding in unsanitary housing for the newcomers. Gradually public pressure forced local government to pass legislation in 1868 which set minimum standards of light, ventilation, and safety for housing. (IS)
Descriptors: City Government, Housing, Immigrants, Laws
Lee, Robert E. – 1995
This book provides a commentary on the current copyright law as it affects authors of creative works, intended for authors as well as for business people who need to know more than just the fundamentals. The book has application for novelists, playwrights, poets, biographers, journalists, historians, educators, artists, designers, musicians,…
Descriptors: Authors, Copyrights, Laws, Legal Responsibility
Mahaffy, J. P. – D. Appleton and Company, 1878
This textbook is a reader on life in ancient Greece. Chapters include: (1) General Features of the Greek Nation; (2) Men and Property; (3) The Greek at Home; (4) Public Life of the Greek Citizen; and (5) Greek Religion and Law.
Descriptors: Textbooks, History Instruction, Laws, Religion
Hood, William R. – Bureau of Education, Department of the Interior, 1924
It is now more than a hundred years since textbooks were first furnished free to the pupils of a public school in this country. The movement began in the administration of city schools and, generally speaking, was confined to cities for many years. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, made provision for free textbooks in its public schools in 1818, and…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Laws, Textbooks, Educational History
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Forbes, Jack D. – American Indian Quarterly, 1983
To shed light on the interaction of African and American peoples during the first 300 years of European colonialism in the Americas, the article explains various terms for racial hybrids, citing historical evidence for the definitions, including litigation, government records, dictionaries, and documents dating from the seventeenth century. (SB)
Descriptors: American Indians, Blacks, Court Litigation, Culture Contact
Madison, James H. – 1986
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 is a fundamental document in the development of the United States. It is outranked in importance only by the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. The immediate purpose of the Northwest Ordinance was to provide government for the largely unsettled lands north and west of the Ohio River. In promising…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Civics, Civil Liberties, Civil Rights
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Pleasant, Deborah L. – OCSS Review, 1988
Discusses the development and growth of public law in the United States during the industrial and technological revolution which followed the Revolutionary War. Examines how these new laws, combined with a spirit of individualism, created a harsh environment in which men were treated as free-willed, self-reliant, risk- and responsibility-taking…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Economic Change, Individualism, Laws
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Bettig, Ronald V. – Critical Studies in Mass Communication, 1992
Employs a theoretical combination of political economy and the cultural history of communication to locate the origins of the concept of literary property. Reveals that the rise of capitalism and the development of the printing press are the keys to understanding the emergence of intellectual property law. (RS)
Descriptors: Capitalism, European History, Federal Legislation, Intellectual History
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