Description

Book Synopsis
In narrative as engaging as it is accessible, Michael Ariens has produced an overarching consideration of Lone Star law and legal culture, something notably missing in other Texas histories. After taking readers chronologically from early settlement through 1920, Ariens focuses on particular areas of Texas law, and on the history of Texas's legal profession itself.

Trade Review
Visitors to the ""Lone Star State"" quickly learn of its “Six Flags” history, as Texas was colonized by Spain and France, became a part of a Mexican state, then an independent republic, and finally part of the United States, with a brief interlude in the Confederacy during the Civil War. Michael Ariens’ masterful Lone Star Law: A Legal History of Texas artfully integrates the colorful history of the state with its complex legal evolution. From the significant roots of Texas law in the civil code law of Spain and France, through its efforts to combine the best features of Spanish law and English common law, its linkage to the southern legacy of slavery and racial discrimination (and its southwestern mistreatment of Mexican Americans), to the sometimes contentious relationship between the state and the federal government, Lone Star Law has it all...Hats off to Michael Ariens for his terrific legal tour de force."" - Law and Politics Book Review

""Lone Star Law is a superb book that examines the legal system in Texas, from theCanary Islanders who settled in San Antonio to the modern era of the mega-law firms in Houston and Dallas. Michael Ariens, a St. Mary’s University law professor, uses historical anecdotes from the state’s colorful past to explain the establishment and evolution of the law and Texas as a colony, a Republic, and a state itself...The book will serve as a great resource for historians interested in some of the most colorful and disturbing eras of the state’s past. It also is an entertaining read for all those fascinated by the multinational heritage of Texas and frontier justice."" - Houston Chronicle

Lone Star Law A Legal History of Texas

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    A Paperback / softback by Michael Ariens, Gordon Morris Bakken

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      View other formats and editions of Lone Star Law A Legal History of Texas by Michael Ariens

      Publisher: Texas Tech Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 30/10/2016
      ISBN13: 9780896729797, 978-0896729797
      ISBN10: 0896729796

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In narrative as engaging as it is accessible, Michael Ariens has produced an overarching consideration of Lone Star law and legal culture, something notably missing in other Texas histories. After taking readers chronologically from early settlement through 1920, Ariens focuses on particular areas of Texas law, and on the history of Texas's legal profession itself.

      Trade Review
      Visitors to the ""Lone Star State"" quickly learn of its “Six Flags” history, as Texas was colonized by Spain and France, became a part of a Mexican state, then an independent republic, and finally part of the United States, with a brief interlude in the Confederacy during the Civil War. Michael Ariens’ masterful Lone Star Law: A Legal History of Texas artfully integrates the colorful history of the state with its complex legal evolution. From the significant roots of Texas law in the civil code law of Spain and France, through its efforts to combine the best features of Spanish law and English common law, its linkage to the southern legacy of slavery and racial discrimination (and its southwestern mistreatment of Mexican Americans), to the sometimes contentious relationship between the state and the federal government, Lone Star Law has it all...Hats off to Michael Ariens for his terrific legal tour de force."" - Law and Politics Book Review

      ""Lone Star Law is a superb book that examines the legal system in Texas, from theCanary Islanders who settled in San Antonio to the modern era of the mega-law firms in Houston and Dallas. Michael Ariens, a St. Mary’s University law professor, uses historical anecdotes from the state’s colorful past to explain the establishment and evolution of the law and Texas as a colony, a Republic, and a state itself...The book will serve as a great resource for historians interested in some of the most colorful and disturbing eras of the state’s past. It also is an entertaining read for all those fascinated by the multinational heritage of Texas and frontier justice."" - Houston Chronicle

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