Books

Our catalog of all books of all genres and formats.

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review,  QP Blog

    Harvard Law Review, #2, Dec. 2013: Honoring Dworkin, ‘Lost’ Essay by Hart on Discretion, Article on Media Leaks, and Notes & Recent Cases

    The December 2013 issue of the Harvard Law Review is dedicated to the memory of Ronald Dworkin, with In Memoriam essays offered by Richard Fallon, Jr., Charles Fried, John C.P. Goldberg, Frances Kamm, Frank Michelman, Martha Minow, and Laurence Tribe. The issue features an article by David Pozen entitled “The Leaky Leviathan: Why the Government Condemns and Condones Unlawful Disclosures of Information.” The issue also includes essays by Nicola Lacey and Geoffrey Shaw examining a previously lost writing by H.L.A. Hart on discretion, as well as the publication of Hart’s essay, “Discretion,” itself, which he wrote while visiting at Harvard during 1956-1957. Student Notes explore such subjects as regulation of…

  • Books,  Fiction

    Novel courtroom fiction by David Crump follows the law and reality of murder for hire in Texas

    New from the author of CONFLICT OF INTEREST and THE HOLDING COMPANY: Law professor David Crump’s latest courtroom drama features Houston trial lawyer Robert Herrick, in a case that hits close to home. When his paralegal Brianna Edwards gets arrested for hiring a hit man, Herrick has to work the law and reality of murder for hire in the Lone Star state—in the toney city of Sugar Land, no less. Pitted against the toughest prosecutor around, who has marching orders to stamp out any threat of violent crime in the affluent community, Herrick will have to use all his courtroom wits and experience to make legal sense of the tangled…

  • Books,  QP Blog,  Yale Law Journal

    Yale Law Journal, Dec. 2013, Analyzes Patent “Construction,” Agencies vs. Litigation, Sexual “Tops,” and Religious Value

    The third issue of The Yale Law Journal‘s Volume 123 (Dec. 2013) features articles on law and legal theory by internationally recognized scholars. Contents include: •  Article, “The Interpretation-Construction Distinction in Patent Law,” by Tun-Jen Chiang & Lawrence B. Solum •  Article, “Agencies as Litigation Gatekeepers,” by David Freeman Engstrom •  Essay,”Tops, Bottoms, and Versatiles: What Straight Views of Penetrative Preferences Could Mean for Sexuality Claims Under Price Waterhouse,” by Ian Ayres & Richard Luedeman •  Review, “Why Protect Religious Freedom?,” by Michael W. McConnell •  Note, “The Case for Tax: A Comparative Approach to Innovation Policy,” by Shaun P. Mahaffy As with previous digital editions of The Yale Law…

  • Books,  Journeys and Memoirs Series

    Solomon Northup’s Twelve Years a Slave is republished in quality hardcover, paperback & eBooks

    The classic and compelling narrative of the kidnapping, slavery, and freedom of a free man of color wrested to rural Louisiana. Lured to the nation's capital by the prospect of work, Solomon Northup, a free man born in New York, is kidnapped and sold into slavery. He spends the next twelve years in brutal bondage. Paperback, hardback and eBooks, featuring readable font & additional rare imagery of the author's life.

  • Books,  Contemporary Society Series,  Featured,  QP Blog

    Peter Gabel’s new book Another Way of Seeing: in hardcover, paperback and eBooks

    In ANOTHER WAY OF SEEING, critical legal studies scholar Peter Gabel argues that our most fundamental spiritual need as human beings is the desire for authentic mutual recognition. Because we live in a world in which this desire is systematically denied due to the legacy of fear of the other that has been passed on from generation to generation, we exist as what he calls ‘withdrawn selves,’ perceiving the other as a threat rather than as the source of our completion as social beings. Calling for a new kind of ‘spiritual activism’ that speaks to this universal interpersonal longing, Gabel shows how we can transform law, politics, public policy, and…

  • Books,  Yale Law Journal

    Yale Law Journal Nov. ’13: Rise of Legislative History, Citizens United as a Press Case, and Mens Rea for Accomplices

    The second issue of The Yale Law Journal‘s Volume 123 features articles on law and legal theory by internationally recognized scholars. Contents include: • Article, “Leviathan and Interpretive Revolution: The Administrative State, the Judiciary, and the Rise of Legislative History, 1890-1950,” by Nicholas R. Parrillo • Essay, “Reconsidering Citizens United as a Press Clause Case,” Michael W. McConnell • Note, “The Mens Rea of Accomplice Liability: Supporting Intentions” • Comment, “A First Amendment Approach to Generic Drug Manufacturer Tort Liability” • Comment, “The EU General Data Protection Regulation: Toward a Property Regime for Protecting Data Privacy” As with previous digital editions of The Yale Law Journal available from Quid Pro…

  • Books,  Contemporary Society Series,  Featured,  QP Blog

    Exploring Disaster from a global and sociological perspective; new book joins the Contemporary Society Series

    Legal governance of disaster brings both care and punishment to the upending of daily life of place-based disasters. National states use disasters to reorganize how they govern. The collection in Disaster and Sociolegal Studies, edited by Denver University professor Susan Sterett, considers how law is implicated in disaster. The late modern expectation that states are to care for their population makes it particularly important to point out the limits to care—limits that appear less in the grand rhetoric than in the government reports, case-level decisionmaking, administrative rules, and criminalization that make up governing. These insightful essays feature leading scholars whose perspectives range across disasters around the world. Their findings point…

  • Books,  Harvard Law Review

    Harvard Law Review‘s Nov. 2013 issue reviews Supreme Court’s last Term, honors Justice Ginsburg, and features Siegel, Issacharoff, Klarman & Murphy

    The November issue, Number 1, is the special annual review of the U.S. Supreme Court’s previous Term. Each year, the issue is introduced by noteworthy and extensive contributions from recognized scholars. In this issue, for the 2012 Term, articles and essays include: • Foreword: “Equality Divided,” by Reva B. Siegel • Comment: “Beyond the Discrimination Model on Voting,” by Samuel Issacharoff • Comment: “Windsor and Brown: Marriage Equality and Racial Equality,” by Michael J. Klarman • Comment: “License, Registration, Cheek Swab: DNA Testing and the Divided Court,” by Erin Murphy The issue also features essays on substantive and procedural law, and judicial method, honoring Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and her…

  • Books,  Classics of the Social Sciences,  Featured

    Everett Hughes’ Classic Study Men and Their Work is a Digitally Remastered Book™

    Quality ebook and paperback reprint of a classic work in the social sciences, written by one of the leading scholars on the intersection of work and sociology. This is an unabridged republication of this much-cited study first published in 1958 and re-released in 1981. Presented with care, the ebook edition features such proper digital formatting as: active TOC, linked chapter endnotes, fully-linked subject index, and the original tables. The new 2015 paperback features embedded pagination from previous printings, for continuity of referencing and citation. Hughes’ recognized study is now part of the Classics of the Social Sciences Series from Quid Pro Books. In this recognized work of sociology and the…

  • Books,  Classics of Law & Society,  QP Blog

    David Nelken adds new preface, and paperback and ebooks, to his award-winning study The Limits of the Legal Process

    This classic and path-breaking study in the sociology of law has won multiple academic awards for its insight, clarity, and broad import in examining the UK’s Rent Acts and landlord behavior over a period of time in the 1960s and 1970s. Not just a revelation of the unintended consequences of well-meaning tenant reforms–though it certainly does lay bare the bizarre side-effects of a law presented as protecting tenants from unscrupulous landlords–the book is a deeper penetration into the very notion of reform legislation, class dominance, competing interests, and the counter-use of reformist law as a weapon by those intended to be regulated. The study even questions the very notion of…