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Symposium Introduction: Herb Jacob's Legacy to Sociolegal Research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 December 2018

Abstract

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Type
Symposium: Special Issue in Honor of Herbert Jacob
Copyright
Copyright © American Bar Foundation, 1998 

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References

References

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Herbert Jacob: A Selected Bibliography

1962. Initial Recruitment of Elected Officials in the U.S.: A Model. Journal of Politics 24:703–16.Google Scholar
1963a. German Administration since Bismarck. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press (reprinted: Greenwood Press, 1974).Google Scholar
1963b. With Kenneth Vines, N., eds. Studies in Judicial Behavior. New Orleans: Tulane University Press.Google Scholar
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1964a. With Rufus P. Browning. Power Motivation and the Political Personality. Public Opinion Quarterly 24:7590.Google Scholar
1964b. The Effect of Institutional Differences in the Recruitment Process: The Case of State Judges. Journal of Public Law 13:104–19.Google Scholar
1964c. The Consequences of Malapportionment: A Note of Caution. Social Forces 43:245–51.Google Scholar
1965a. Justice in America. Boston: Little, Brown. (2d ed. 1972; 3d ed. 1978; 4th ed. 1984).Google Scholar
1965b. With Kenneth Vines, N., eds. Politics in the American States. Boston: Little, Brown. (2d ed. 1971; 3d ed. 1976; 4th ed., Virginia Gray coeditor, 1983; 5th ed., Virginia Gray and Robert Albritton, coeditors, 1990; 6th ed., Virginia Gray, coeditor, 1996).Google Scholar
1966a. Dimensions of State Politics. In State Legislatures in American Politics, ed. Heard, Alexander. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
1966b. Judicial Insulation: Elections, Direct Participation and Public Attention to the Courts in Wisconsin. Wisconsin Law Review 1966:801–19.Google Scholar
1967. Ed. Law, Politics, and the Federal Courts. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
1968a. Wage Garnishment and Bankruptcy Proceedings in Four Wisconsin Cities. In City Politics and Public Policy, ed. James Wilson, Q. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
1968b. With Michael Lipsky. Outputs, Structure and Power: An Assessment of Changes in the Study of State and Local Politics. Journal of Politics 30:510–38.Google Scholar
1969a. Debtors in Court: The Use of Court Services by Debtors and Creditors. Chicago: Rand McNally.Google Scholar
1969b. Judicial and Political Efficacy of Litigants. In Fronfiers of Judicial Research, ed. Joel Grossman, B. and Tannenhaus, Joseph. New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
1970. With Weissberg, Robert. Elementary Political Analysis. New York: McGraw-Hill (2d ed. 1975).Google Scholar
1971a. Black and White Perceptions of Justice in the City. Law and Society Review 06:6988.Google Scholar
1971b. Problems of Scale Equivalency in Measuring Attitudes in American Subcultures. Social Science Quarterly 52:6175.Google Scholar
1972. Contact with Government Agencies: An Approach to the Distribution of Government Services. Midwest Journal of Political Science 1972:123–46.Google Scholar
1973. Urban Justice: Law and Order in American Cities. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall.Google Scholar
1974a. Ed. The Potential for Reform of Criminal Justice. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage.Google Scholar
1974b. With James Eisenstein. Measuring Performance and Outputs of Urban Criminal Courts. Social Science Quarterly 55:713–24.Google Scholar
1976. Sentences and Other Sanctions in the Criminal Courts of Baltimore, Chicago, and Detroit. Political Science Quarterly 90:617–35.Google Scholar
1977. With James Eisenstein. Felony Justice: An Organizational Analysis of Criminal Courts. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
1979. Related Party Disputes in Criminal Courts: Some Data and Speculations about Alternative Functions. In The Study of Criminal Courts, ed. Peter Nardulli, F. Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger.Google Scholar
1980a. Crime and Justice in Urban America. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall.Google Scholar
1980b. The Deterrent Effects of Formal and Informal Sanctions. Law and Social Policy 2:6180.Google Scholar
1981. With Michael J. Rich. The Effects of the Police on Crime: A Second Look. Law and Society Review 15:109–22.Google Scholar
1982a. With Michael J. Rich. Rejoinder. Law and Society Review 16:171–72.Google Scholar
1982b. Keeptng Pace: Court Resources and Crime. Judicature. 66:7383.Google Scholar
1983a. With Heinz, Anne M. and Robert Lineberry, L., eds. Crime in City Politics. New York: Longman.Google Scholar
1983b. Courts as Organizations. In Empirical Theories about Courts, ed. Boyum, Keith and Mather, Lynn. New York: Longman.Google Scholar
1983c. The Travails of Exploration: The Study of Trial Courts in the United States. Law and Society Review 17:407–24.Google Scholar
1984a. The Frustration of Policy: Responses to Crime by American Cities. Boston: Little, Brown.Google Scholar
1984b. Using Published Data. Beverly Hills, Calif.: Sage.Google Scholar
1985. City Responses to Crime. In The New Urban Reality, ed. Paul Peterson, E. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution.Google Scholar
1986. Law and Politics in the United States: An Introduction. Boston: Little, Brown (2d ed. 1995).Google Scholar
1988. Silent Revolution: The Transformation of Divorce Law in the United States. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
1989. Another Look at No-Fault Divorce and the Post-Divorce Finances of Women. Law and Society Review. 23:95115.Google Scholar
1990. Women and Divorce Reform. In Women in Twentieth Century American Politics, ed. Tilley, Louise and Gurin, Patricia. New York: Russell Sage Foundation.Google Scholar
1991. Decision Making in Trial Courts. In American Courts: A Critical Assessment, ed. John Gates, B. and Johnson, Charles A. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Press.Google Scholar
1992. The Elusive Shadow of the Law. Law and Society Review 26:665–90.Google Scholar
1996. With Erhard Blankenburg, Herbert Kritzer M., Provine, Doris Marie, and Sanders, Joseph. Courts, Law and Politics in Comparative Perspective. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
1997. The Governance of Trial Judges. Law and Society Review 31:330.Google Scholar