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:: PAST PRESIDENTS & AWARD
WINNERS ::
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Law and History
Review (LHR)
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President
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Sutherland Prize Winner
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Surrency Prize Winner
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Honorary Fellows
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Corresponding Fellows
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Volume
1, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1983
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Morris
S. Arnold
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Volume
2, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1984
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Morris
S. Arnold
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Volume
3, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1985
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Morris
S. Arnold
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Volume
4, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1986
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Barbara
Aronstein Black
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Volume
5, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1987
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Barbara
Aronstein Black
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Volume
6, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1988
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Barbara
Aronstein Black
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Paul
Brand; "The Education of Lawyers in Britain prior to 1400," Historical Review, 60 (1987)
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Gregory
Alexander, "The Transformation of Trusts as a Legal Category,
1800-1914," LHR, 5 (1987)
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John
T. Noonan, Jr.
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Volume
7, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1989
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Barbara
Aronstein Black
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Joseph
Biancalana, "For Want of Justice: Legal
Reforms of Henry II," Columbia Law Review,
88 (1988)
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Christopher
L. Tomlins, "A Mysterious Power: Industrial
Accidents and the Legal Construction of Employment Relations in Massachusetts,
1800-1850," LHR, 6 (1988)
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Morris
S. Arnold
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Volume
8, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1990
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Lawrence M. Friedman
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Volume
9, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1991
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Lawrence M. Friedman
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No
prize was awarded in 1990; so two were awarded in 1991: Philip A.
Hamburger, "The Development of the Nineteenth Century Censensus Theory of Contract," LHR,
7 (1989); Amy Louise Erickson, "Common Law Versus Common Practice: The
Use of Marriage Settlements in Early Modern England," Economic History Review, 43 (1990)
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The
prize was split equally between : N.E.H. Hull, "Restatement and
Reform: A New Perspective on the Origins of the American Law
Institute," and Eileen
Spring, "The
Heiress-at-Law: English Real Property from a New Point of View," both
in LHR 8 (1990)
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Volume
10, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1992
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R.H.
Helmholz
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J.M.
Beattie, "Scales of Justice: Defense Counsel and the English Criminal
Trial in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries," LHR,
9 (1991)
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Peter
Karsten, "The 'Discovery' of Law by English
and American Jurists of the Seventeenth, Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries: Third Party Beneficiary Contracts as a Test Case," LHR,
9 (1991)
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Leonard
Levy
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John
Baker
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Volume
11, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1993
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R.H.
Helmholz
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Volume
12, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1994
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Harold
M. Hyman
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J.L.
Barton, "The Mystery of Bracton," Journal of Legal History, 14 (1993)
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Philip
Girard, "Themes and Variations in Early Canadian Legal Culture:
Beamish Murdoch and His Epitome of the Laws of Nova Scotia," LHR,
11 (1993)
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A.W.B.
Simpson
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Peter
Landau
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Volume
13, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1995
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Harold
M. Hyman
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Philip
Hamburger, "Revolution and Judicial Review: Chief Justice Holt's
Opinion in City of London v. Wood," Columbia Law Review , 94 (1994)
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George
Behlmer, "Summary Justice and Working Class
Marriage in England,
1870-1940," LHR , 12 (1994)
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Volume
14, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1996
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Paul
L. Murphy
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Joan
R. Kent, "The Centre and the Localities: State Formation and Parish
Government in England,
ca. 1640-1740," Historical Journal
Vol. 38, No. 2
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Barbara
Welke, "When All the Women Were White and
All the Blacks Were Men: Gender, Class and Race on the Road to Plessy , 1855-1914," LHR, 13
(1995)
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Volume
15, Nos. 1-2; Spring-Fall, 1997
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Laura
Kalman
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Albert
W . Alschuler,
"Rediscovering Blackstone," University of Pennsylvania
Law Review, 145 (1996);
Honorable Mention: Margot Finn, "Women, Consumption and Coverture in England, 1760-1860," Historical Journal 39 (1996)
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Timothy
S. Haskett, "The Medieval Court of
Chancery," LHR, 14 (1996)
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Lawrence M. Friedman
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Ennio Cortese
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Volume
16, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 1998
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Laura
Kalman
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David
J. Ibbetson, "Fault and Absolute Liability
in Pre-Modern Contract Law," Journal
of Legal History, 18 (1997);
Honorable Mention:, Henry Ansgar Kelly, "Statutes
of Rape and Alleged Ravishers of Wives: A Context for the Charges Against
Thomas Mallory, Knight," Viator , 28 (1997)
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G.
Edward White, "The American Law Institute and the Triumph of Modernist
Jurisprudence," LHR, 15 (1997)
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Morris
Cohen, Harold M. Hyman, W. A. J. Watson
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Volume
17, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 1999
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Laura
Kalman
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Peter
King, "The Rise of Juvenile Delinquency in England, 1780-1840: Changing
Patterns of Perception and Prosecution," Past and Present 160 (August 1998);
Honorable Mention, Richard J. Ross, "The memorial Culture of Early
Modern English Lawyers: Memory as Keyword, Shelter, and Identity,
1560-1640," Yale Journal of Law
and the Humanities 10 (1998)
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Christine Desan;
Michael Willrich, “The Two
Percent Solution: Eugenic Jurisprudence and the Socialization of American
Law, 1900-1930,” Law and History Review 16
(Spring 1998): 63-111.
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Harry
N. Scheiber, Kathryn T. Preyer
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Volume
18, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 2000
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Thomas
A. Green
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John
H. Langbein, "The Prosecutorial Origins of Defence Counsel in the Eighteenth Century: the
Appearance of Solicitors," Cambridge Law Journal, 58 (1999);
Honorable Mention: Norma Landau, "Indictment for Fun and Profit: A
Prosecutor's Reward at Eighteenth-Century Quarter Sessions," LHR, 17
(1999)
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Norma
Landau, "Indictment for Fun and Profit: A Prosecutor's Reward at
Eighteenth-Century Quarter Sessions," LHR, 17
(1999)
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Michael
Stolleis
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Volume
19, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 2001
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Thomas
A. Green
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Robert
Shoemaker, "The Decline of Public Insult in London 1660-1800," Past and Present
, No. 169, 2000
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James
Jaffe, "Industrial Arbitration, Equity, and Authority in England,
1800-1850," LHR, 18 (2000)
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Hector
L. MacQueen, Peter G. Stein
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Volume
20, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 2002
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Robert
W. Gordon
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The
prize was not awarded in 2002.
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Maria
Agren, "Asserting One's Rights: Swedish
Property Law in the Transition from Community Law to State Law," LHR,
19 (2001)
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Volume 21, Nos.
1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 2003
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Robert
W. Gordon
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Joseph
Biancalana, "Actions of Covenant,
1200-1330," LHR, 20 (2002)
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Stephen
Jacobson, "Law and Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century Europe: The Case
of Catalonia in Comparative
Perspective," LHR, 20 (2002);
Honorable Mention: Ronen Shamir, "The
Comrades Law of Hebrew Workers in Palestine:
A Study in Socialist Justice," LHR, 20 (2002)
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The
Paul L. Murphy Award was given to was given to William Thomas.
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Volume
22, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 2004
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Harry
N. Scheiber
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The prize was
split equally between: Eliga Gould, “Zones
of Law, Zones of Violence: The LegalGeography of
the British Atlantic, circa 1772,” William and Mary Quarterly, 60
(2003) and Daniel Klerman, “Was the Jury
Ever Self-Informing?” Southern California
Law Review 77 (2003).
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The prize was split equally between: Daniel
J. Hulsebosch, “The Ancient Constitution
and the Expanding Empire: Sir Edward Coke’s British
Jurisprudence” and Sarah Hanley, “’The Jurisprudence of
the Arrêts’: Marital Union, Civil Society,
and State Formation in France,
1550-1650,” both in LHR, 21 (2003)
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Kjell Modéer
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The
Paul L. Murphy Award was given to was given to Michele Landis Dauber.
The first William Nelson Cromwell Prize went to Michael Willrich for City of Courts: Socializing Justice in
Progressive Era Chicago (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
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Volume
23, Nos. 1-3; Spring-Summer-Fall, 2005
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Harry
N. Scheiber
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Danya C. Wright, ‘Well-Behaved Women Don’t
Make History’: Rethinking English Family Law,” Wisconsin Women’s Law Journa,l 19 (2004)
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Amalia Kessler, "Enforcing Virtue: Social Norms and
Self-Interest in an 18th century Merchant
Court," LHR 22 (2004)
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Laura
Kalman
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The
William Nelson Cromwell Prize was awarded to John Fabian Witt for The Accidental Republic. Crippled Workingmen,
Destitute Widows, and the Remaking of American
Law (Harvard University Press, 2004). The Paul L.
Murphy Award was given to was given to
Jill Silos. Cromwell Fellowships were given to Ajay K. Mehrotra,
Bernie D. Jones and Paul L. Castro.
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Volume
24, Nos. 1-3; Spring Summer Fall, 2006
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Charles
Donahue, Jr.
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Andrea McKenzie, “ ’This Death Some Strong and Stout Hearted
Man Doth Choose’: The Practice of Peine
Forte et Dure in Seventeenth- and
Eighteenth-Century England,”
LHR 23 (2005)
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Andrea McKenzie, “ ’This Death Some Strong and Stout Hearted
Man Doth Choose’: The Practice of Peine
Forte et Dure in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century
England,”
LHR 23 (2005)
Honorable Mention: Sally H. Clarke for “Unmanageable Risks: MacPherson v. Buick and the Emergence of a Mass
Consumer Market,” LHR 23 (2005)
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Morton
J. Horwitz
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Anne
Lefebvre-Teillard
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The
Reid Prize was awarded to Daniel J. Hulsebosch
for Constituting
Empire :New York and the
Transformation of Constitutionalism in the Atlantic World,
1664-1830 (University of North
Carolina Press, 2005). Stuart Banner was the runner-up for How the Indians Lost their Land:
Law and Power on the Frontier. The William Nelson
Cromwell Prize was awarded to Holly Brewer for By Birth or Consent: Children, Law & the Anglo-American
Revolution in Authority (University
of North Carolina Press,
2005). Cromwell Fellowships
were given to Christopher Beauchamp, Kenneth W. Mack, Kunal
Parker, Nicholas Parrillo, and Daniel J. Sharfstein. The Preyer Scholars were Sophia Z. Lee and Karen M. Tani. The Paul L.
Murphy Award was not given.
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