Lawyer, scholar, teacher and activist : a liber amicorum in honour of Derek Roebuck / edited by Neil Kaplan, Robert Morgan.
Description: x, 555 pages ; 22 cmISBN: 0957215398; 9780957215399Subject(s): Roebuck, Derek | Law -- History | Law -- Language | Arbitration and award -- England -- History | Mediation -- England -- History | Arbitration and award | Law | Law -- Language | Mediation | EnglandGenre/Form: Festschriften. | History.DDC classification: 340.1 LOC classification: K160 | .L39 2021
Contents:
Summary: "This collection of essays, lectures, tributes and reminiscences honours the life, work, influence and achievements of the late Professor Derek Roebuck (1935-2020). He was a scholar, teacher, lawyer, prolific author, researcher, editor, human rights activist, feminist and creator of a widely acclaimed ten-volume series chronicling the international history of arbitration and mediation from Ancient Greece to the 'Long' eighteenth century (1700-1815)."--
In memoriam -- Scholarly articles by Derek Roebuck -- Contributed scholarly articles -- Selected Chartered Institute of Arbitrators Roebuck lectures.
Item type | Current library | Class number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item reservations |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book-Circulating | Fischer Hall Library Main shelves | K160. L39 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | Donated by Sally Charin, Spring 2023 | B014741 |
Total reservations: 0
Includes bibliographical references and index.
In memoriam -- Scholarly articles by Derek Roebuck -- Contributed scholarly articles -- Selected Chartered Institute of Arbitrators Roebuck lectures.
"This collection of essays, lectures, tributes and reminiscences honours the life, work, influence and achievements of the late Professor Derek Roebuck (1935-2020). He was a scholar, teacher, lawyer, prolific author, researcher, editor, human rights activist, feminist and creator of a widely acclaimed ten-volume series chronicling the international history of arbitration and mediation from Ancient Greece to the 'Long' eighteenth century (1700-1815)."--