| Title : | Introduction to law in the Republic of Ireland : its history, principles, administration & substance; with supplement, 1988 | | Material Type: | printed text | | Authors: | Richard Grimes, Author ; Patrick Horgan, Author | | Publisher: | Wolfhound Press | | Publication Date: | 1995 | | Pagination: | 374 p. | | Size: | 21 cm | | ISBN (or other code): | 978-0-86327-218-9 | | General note: | 'Law, in common with other primary services such as health and education, is an institution to which all should have access and the facility to study and comprehend, and where necessary utilise'[from the Introduction] | | Class number: | 349.417 | | Abstract: | This book presents a clear, simplified and questioning analysis of the law. It is directe not only at students of law and related subjects such as business, accounting, management, commerce, etc., but also at those working alongside the law (social workers, for instance), and at the enquiring general reader.
Introduction to Law in the Republic of Ireland is concerned principally with the law in relation to its content rather than its philosophy. However an appreciation of the wider implications of and reasons for the legal system, the idealogy of law, is provided. The main text of the book is in three sections (see contents list for detailed subdivisions): basic legal principles; administration of the law; and substance of the law. |
Introduction to law in the Republic of Ireland : its history, principles, administration & substance; with supplement, 1988 [printed text] / Richard Grimes, Author ; Patrick Horgan, Author . - [S.l.] : Wolfhound Press, 1995 . - 374 p. ; 21 cm. ISBN : 978-0-86327-218-9 'Law, in common with other primary services such as health and education, is an institution to which all should have access and the facility to study and comprehend, and where necessary utilise'[from the Introduction] | Class number: | 349.417 | | Abstract: | This book presents a clear, simplified and questioning analysis of the law. It is directe not only at students of law and related subjects such as business, accounting, management, commerce, etc., but also at those working alongside the law (social workers, for instance), and at the enquiring general reader.
Introduction to Law in the Republic of Ireland is concerned principally with the law in relation to its content rather than its philosophy. However an appreciation of the wider implications of and reasons for the legal system, the idealogy of law, is provided. The main text of the book is in three sections (see contents list for detailed subdivisions): basic legal principles; administration of the law; and substance of the law. |
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