August 2017 New Books

In August 2017, the Law Library added the following new titles to the collection to support the research and curricular needs of our faculty and students.

COMPARATIVE AND FOREIGN LAW

  1. Rosalind Dixon and Tom Ginsburg, eds., Comparative Constitutional Law in Latin America (2017).

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, GENERALLY

  1. John D. Inazu, Confident Pluralism: surviving and thriving through deep difference (2016).

CRIMINAL LAW AND PROCEDURE

  1. Daniel S. Medwed, ed., Wrongful Convictions and the DNA Revolution: twenty-five years of freeing the innocent (2017).

DISPUTE RESOLUTION

  1. J. Kim Wright, Lawyers as Changemakers: the global integrative law movement (2016).

FIRST AMENDMENT

  1. Gregory P. Magarian, Managed Speech: the Roberts court’s First Amendment (2017).
  2. Neil Richards, Intellectual Privacy: rethinking civil liberties in the digital age (2015).

HEALTH LAW AND POLICY

  1. Patricia Illingworth and Wendy E. Parmet, The Health of Newcomers: immigration, health policy, and the case for global solidarity (2017).

HUMAN RIGHTS LAW

  1. Sital Kalantry, Women’s Human Rights and Migration: sex-selective abortion laws in the United States and India (2017).

JUDGES

  1. Lee Epstein and Stefanie A. Lindquist, eds., The Oxford Handbook of U.S. Judicial Behavior (2017).

LABOR LAW

  1. Marion G. Crain, Winifred R. Poster, and Miriam A. Cherry, eds., Invisible Labor: hidden work in the contemporary world (2016).

LAW AND SOCIETY

  1. Brian Z. Tamanaha, A Realistic Theory of Law (2017).

LEGAL EDUCATION

  1. Daniel P. Barbezat and Mirabai Bush, Contemplative Practices in Higher Education: powerful methods to transform teaching and learning (2014).
  2. Jane Bloom Grise, Critical Reading for Success in Law School and Beyond (2017).

LEGAL HISTORY

  1. Bruce W. Frier, general ed., The Codex of Justinian : a new annotated translation, with parallel Latin and Greek text based on a translation by Justice Fred H. Blume (2016).

MEDICAL JURISPRUDENCE

  1. Rebecca Dresser, Silent Partners: human subjects and research ethics (2017).

PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHIATRY

  1. Kate Fagan, What made Maddy Run: the secret struggles and tragic death of an all-American teen (2017).

RACE AND ETHNICITY

  1. Kimberly Jade Norwood, ed., Ferguson’s Fault Lines: the race quake that rocked a nation (2016).

RELIGION

  1. Holly Fernandez Lynch, I. Glenn Cohen, and Elizabeth Sepper, eds., Law, Religion, and Health in the United States (2017).

All of these books are available from the Law Library.  If you would like to check out any of these titles, please contact the circulation desk at either 806-742-3957 or circulation.law@ttu.edu.  Library staff will be able to assist in locating and checking out any of these items.