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From Samuel Pufendorf to the Raoul Wallenberg Institute: Lund University Law School during Three Centuries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2019

Extract

The first model is described as the practicing legal profession's House of Intellect. It provides, like a medical school attached to a teaching hospital, not only “basic education and training, but also specialist training, continuing education, basic and applied research and high level consultancy and information services.” Twining comments with an understatement: “In no modern Western country has this model been realised in law.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © 1996 by the International Association of Law Libraries 

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References

1 Twining, William, Blackstone's Tower: The English Law School, Sweet & Maxwell London 1994, Pp. 52.Google Scholar

2 Suum cuique tribuere. Dig. 1,1, 10 § 1.Google Scholar

3 Modéer, Kjell Å. (ed.), Samuel Pufendorf 1632-1682. Rättshistoriska studier, Bd XII, Lund, 1986, ix.Google Scholar

4 Modéer, Kjell Å., Grotius, Hugo and Lund, Lund, 1987.Google Scholar

5 Modéer, Kjell Å. Thyrén, Johan C.W. - legendarisk lundaprofessor. [Exhibition catalogue], Lund, 1983.Google Scholar