Wrongful Damage to Property in Roman Law : British perspectives

Roman law Torts (Roman law)
Edinburgh University Press
2017
EISBN 9781474434478
Intro; Wrongful Damage to Property in Roman Law; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Preface; Part I Matters of Context; 1 The Early Historiography of the Lex Aquilia in Britain: Introducing Students to the Digest; 2 William Warwick Buckland on the Lex Aquilia; 3 'This Concern with Pattern': F H Lawson's Negligence in the Civil Law; 4 Students' Digest: 9.2 in Oxford in the Twentieth Century; Part II Case Studies; 5 Revisiting D.9.2.23.1; 6 Reflections on the Quantification of Damnum; 7 Causation and Remoteness: British Steps on a Roman Path
8 Roman Law and Civil Law Reflections Upon the Meaning of Iniuria in Damnum Iniuria Datum9 Lord Atkin, Donoghue v Stevenson and the Lex Aquilia: Civilian Roots of the 'Neighbour' Principle; 10 Conclusions; Index
Explores hieroglyphs as a metaphor for the relationship between new media and writing in British modernism.
8 Roman Law and Civil Law Reflections Upon the Meaning of Iniuria in Damnum Iniuria Datum9 Lord Atkin, Donoghue v Stevenson and the Lex Aquilia: Civilian Roots of the 'Neighbour' Principle; 10 Conclusions; Index
Explores hieroglyphs as a metaphor for the relationship between new media and writing in British modernism.
