Academic literature on the topic 'Jurisprudence, United States: Massachusetts, 1838'

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Books on the topic "Jurisprudence, United States: Massachusetts, 1838"

1

Edward, Nelson William. Americanization of the common law: The impact of legal change on Massachusetts society, 1760-1830. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1994.

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Adams, Henry. The education of Henry Adams: An autobiography. New York: Modern Library, 1996.

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Adams, Henry. The education of Henry Adams. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.

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Henry, Adams. The Education of Henry Adams. Ottawa: eBooksLib, 2005.

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Henry, Adams. Vospitanie Genri Adamsa. Moskva: Progress, 1988.

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Henry, Adams. The education of Henry Adams. New York: Oxford University Press, 2008.

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Harr, Jonathan. A civil action. Thorndike, Me: Thorndike Press, 1998.

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Harr, Jonathan. A civil action. New York: Vintage Books, 1998.

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Adams, Charles Francis 1807-1886, and John Quincy 1767-1848 Adams. Massachusetts Register and United States Calendar, for the Year of Our Lord . . ; 1838. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2021.

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Adams, Charles Francis 1807-1886, and Adams John Quincy. Massachusetts Register and United States Calendar, for the Year of Our Lord . . ; 1838. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2021.

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Book chapters on the topic "Jurisprudence, United States: Massachusetts, 1838"

1

"Introduction." In Public Health Ethics, edited by Ronald Bayer, Lawrence O. Gostin, Bruce Jennings, and Bonnie Steinbock, 249–53. Oxford University PressNew York, NY, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195180848.003.00019.

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Abstract The public health authority to limit individual freedom when disease threatens has long been recognized in constitutional jurisprudence. One hundred years ago, in Jacobson v. Massachusetts, a case that centered on the question of compulsory vaccination, the Supreme Court held that the U. S. Constitution permits states to enact “such reasonable regulations [to] protect the public health and the public safety” as long as such efforts did not “contravene the Constitution of the United States, nor infringe any right guaranteed or secured by that instrument.” Jacobson also underscored the belief that courts should give deference to the government’s exercise of the police powers designed to protect the public. 1 Capturing the enormous scope afforded to the state acting in the name of public health, a treatise on constitutional law in 1900 asserted that before the demands of public health “all constitutionally guaranteed rights must give way.”2 From an ethical point of view, the warrant for state interventions to protect individuals from the dangers of infectious threats is provided by the “harm principle” famously given voice by the nineteenth-century philosopher John Stuart Mill, who said in On Liberty, “The only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised over any member of a civilized community, against his will, is to prevent harm to others. His own good, either physical or moral, is not sufficient warrant.”3 Part IV examines the ethics of infectious disease control.
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