Here’s the TOC to Law and History Review 31:4 (November 2013).
In this Issue, by Elizabeth Dale
Understanding Curtiss-Wright, Edward A. Purcell
The French Revolution, the Union of Avignon, and the Challenges of National Self-Determination, by Edward James Kolla
The Statute of Westminster, 1931: An Irish Perspective, by Thomas Mohr
A Fine Mixture of Pity and Justice:” The Criminal Justice Response to Infanticide in Ireland, 1922–1949, by Karen M. Brennan
Judicial “Truth” and Historical “Truth”: The Case of the Ardeatine Caves Massacre, by Giorgio Resta and Vincenzo Zeno-Zencovich
Book Reviews
Nan Goodman, Banished: Common Law and the Rhetoric of Social Exclusion in Early New England, by Carla Spivack
M. Michelle Jarrett Morris, Under Household Government: Sex and Family in Puritan Massachusetts, and Mark E. Kann, Taming Passion for the Public Good: Sex in the Early Republic, by Elizabeth H. Pleck
Christopher Frank, Master and Servant Law: Chartists, Trade Unions, Radical Lawyers and the Magistracy in England, 1840–1865, by Norma Landau
Paul Friedland, Seeing Justice Done: The Age of Spectacular Capital Punishment in France, by Randall McGowen
David M. Rabban, Law's History: American Legal Thought and the Transatlantic Turn to History, by Steven Wilf
R. Blake Brown, Arming and Disarming: A History of Gun Control in Canada, by Robert J. Spitzer
Holly McCammon, The U.S. Women's Jury Movement and Strategic Adaptation: A More Just Verdict, by Joanna L. Grossman
Eileen Boris and Jennifer Klein, Caring for America: Home Health Workers in the Shadow of the Welfare State, by Karen M. Tani