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Schlegel is right. It is difficult to swallow the notion that twentieth century history began twenty years late. I agree that the central issue for legal historians is the growth of the nation state's apparatus. We should indeed be concerned with the regulation and direction of an economy. Yet my own preferred date for the beginning of twentieth century legal history is 1901. More precisely, I would pinpoint 2:15 A.M. on September 14, 1901, the morning Theodore Roosevelt became President (Pringle, 1956: 163).
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- Copyright © 1988 The Law and Society Association.
References
COOPER, John Milton (1983) The Warrior and the Priest. Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
FISCUS, Robert J. (1984) “Studying The Brethren: The Legal Realist Bias of Investigative Journalism,” 1984 American Bar Foundation Research Journal 487.Google Scholar
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