
Home
» Publications
» Past Law, Present Histories
Past Law, Present Histories
- Cover
- Title page
- Imprint and copyright information
- Introduction: Interdisciplinarity in the Study of Law’s History
- I. Law and Colonialism
- Redemption, Colonialism and International Criminal Law: The Nineteenth Century Slave-Trading Trials of Samo and Peters
- Linguistics, Religion and Law in Colonial New South Wales: Lancelot Threlkeld and Settler-Colonial Humanitarian Debates
- ‘Destitute of the knowledge of God’: Māori Testimony Before the New Zealand Courts in the Early Crown Colony Period
- II. Law in Community
- Public Opinion, Private Remonstrance, and the Law: Protecting Animals in Australia, 1803–1914
- Using th-e Law: Working-Class Communities and Carnal Knowledge Cases in Victoria, 1900–06
- Reading Past Cases of Child Cruelty in the Present: The Use of the Parental Right to Discipline in New Zealand Court Trials, 1890–1902
- Women, Children and Violence in Aboriginal Law: Some Perspectives From the Southeast Queensland Frontier
- III. Law as Theory and Practice
- How to Write Feminist Legal History: Some Notes on Genealogical Method, Family Law, and the Politics of the Present
- Spain’s ‘pact of silence’ and the Removal of Franco’s Statues
- ‘The sailor is a human being’: Labour Market Regulation and the Australian Navigation Act 1912
- Parental ‘Consent’ to Child Removal in Stolen Generations Cases
- Contributors
- Bibliography
+61 2 6125 5111
The Australian National University, Canberra
CRICOS Provider : 00120C
ABN : 52 234 063 906
You appear to be using Internet Explorer 7, or have compatibility view turned on. Your browser is not supported by ANU web styles.
» Learn how to fix this
» Ignore this warning in future
» Learn how to fix this
» Ignore this warning in future


menu


