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THE GENERAL CONDITIONS OF PROGRESS.

NATIONAL CHARACTERISTICS AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT.
RECIPROCAL RELATIONS OF FREE MEN. POLITICAL ECONOMY.

THE LAW OF INTERCHANGE. VALUE-DEMAND AND SUPPLY-RENT.
CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH POSSESSIONS ARE HELD. CAPITAL-CREDIT.
THE MEANS BY WHICH VALUE IS REPRESENTED. CURRENCY AND CIRCULATION
REMUNERATION OF SERVICES. INTEREST. WAGES AND PROFIT.

8vo. cloth, īs. 6d.

ON SOME

QUESTIONS OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:

BY HISTORICUS.

Reprinted from The Times, with considerable Additions.

CONTENTS.

THE INTERNATIONAL DOCTRINE OF RECOGNITION.

THE PERILS OF INTERVENTION.

ON M. HAUTEFEUILLE "DES DROITS DES NATIONS NEUTRES."
THE LAW OF BLOCKADE.

NEUTRAL TRADE IN CONTRABAND OF War.

BELLIGERENT VIOLATION OF NEUTRAL RIGHTS,

THE FOREIGN ENLISTMENT ACT.

THE RIGHT OF SEARCH.

ON THE AFFAIR OF THE "TRENT," 1862.

THE TERRITORIALITY OF THE MERCHANT VESSEL.

An PPENDIX, containing some ADDITIONAL LETTERS. 8vo. 18.

In Preparation by the same Author,

LEADING CASES OF INTERNATIONAL

LAW.

Crown Svo, cloth, 10s.

TREATISE ON THE FISHERY LAWS
OF THE UNITED KINGDOM:

INCLUDING THE LAWS OF ANGLING.

BY JAMES PATERSON,

BARRISTER AT-LAW.

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"Mr. Fawcett has condensed within a single volume of moderate size, a full outline of political economy, and by means of familiar exposition of the fundamental principles of the science has much facilitated its study. . . . The clearness of his treatment of an extensive and difficult subject will render his book a valuable companion to the mercantile and political student, and its convenient size and illustrative style give it considerable advantage over more extensive and formal treatises."-Morning Post.

8vo. cloth, 18s.

GENERAL VIEW OF

THE CRIMINAL LAW OF ENGLAND:

BY JAMES FITZJAMES STEPHEN, M.A.

OF THE INNER TEMPLE, BARRISTER-AT-LAW,

AND RECORDER OF NEWARK-ON-TRENT.

"It is only by a very happy and a very rare accident that such a book as Mr. Stephen's can be produced. Mr. Stephen treats of the Criminal Law of England so as to awaken in a high degree that peculiar interest which attaches to all descriptions of trials for great crimes, but he also examines with boldness and originality into the grounds on which the system of English Law is based, and takes the trouble not only to show how we come to have what we have, but how very considerable improvements might be introduced. There is no part of Criminal Law which he does not present to us as viewed by a mind capable of thinking for itself, and none which he does not illustrate by all the resources of a practical and vigorous style."Saturday Review.

MACMILLAN AND CO. LONDON AND CAMBRIDGE.

PRIVATE LAW

AMONG THE ROMAN S.

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