This classic text demystifies the procedures, customs and controversies of the English legal system.
Marcel Berlins and Clare Dyer explain and discuss how the system evolved and how it has been changing, the way it operates- including vivid descriptions of the trial process- and how lawyers work. At every stage they ask: is the English legal system as good as we have the right to expect?
Now completely revised and updated for this fifth edition, the book surveys recent developments in the workings of the machinery of justice and the outlook for the future. The authors show how the legal establishment has tried to adopt a more open, modern approach. At the same time far-reaching and controversial changes to the system promise better access to justice for all, but will they achieve that aim?
![]() Vol 13 No 11
Nov/December 2008
Cover: Detail from Priscilla Coleman’s work in “Court Scenes” Major New Titles published in November (pp. 1-29) Inner Temple Book Prize Shortlist (p. 31) November Subs & Supplements (pp. 33-44) Middle Temple Library 50th Birthday (p. 44) Wigs & Wherefores Launch (pp. 45-46) Forthcoming Publications (pp. 48-51) WS&H Publications (pp. 52-64) |
William Blackstone: Law and Letters in the Eighteenth CenturyEdited by:
ISBN: 0199550298
ISBN13: 9780199550296
Published: October 2008
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Hardback
Price: £29.99
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