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" that the individual has no rights which the state is bound to respect is discarded (p. 173). For the experience of Russia's iron age would certainly indicate that the state, as well as the private employer, can be an exploiter (p. 275). Corroboration... "
Hearings - Page 113
by United States. Congress. House. Committee on the District of Columbia - 1936
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A History of Continental Criminal Law

Ludwig von Bar - 1916 - 628 pages
...conception of the relation of the individual to the State, it is said that according to the Roman conception the individual has no rights which the State is bound to respect, and that laws for the protection of the individual are mere voluntary- concessions by the State which...
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The Continental Legal History Series, Volume 6

1916 - 634 pages
...conception of the relation of the individual to the State, it is said that according to the Roman conception the individual has no rights which the State is bound to respect, and that laws for the protection of the individual are mere voluntan*' concessions by the State which...
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A History of Continental Criminal Law

Ludwig von Bar - 1916 - 628 pages
...Roman conception of the relation of the individual to the State. According to the Roman conception th"e"\ individual has no rights which the State is bound to respect. This I is forcibly illustrated by the well-known absolutism of the magis- I * Cf. Niasen, "Das Justitium,...
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The Constitutional Review, Volumes 3-4

Henry Campbell Black, Herbert Francis Wright - 1919 - 740 pages
...rights of the minority. In our legislation we seem definitely committed to the governmental doctrine that the individual has no rights which the state is bound to respect. A few instances will suffice to illustrate the extent to which this doctrine has been carried in recent...
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National Health Insurance and the Friendly Societies

Frederick Ludwig Hoffman - 1921 - 128 pages
...upon otherwise than as largely of private concern. They are typical rather of the German view-point that the individual has no rights which the State is bound to respect than of the old friendly-society conviction that the individual is of right entitled to the largest...
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The Constitutional Review, Volume 4

1920 - 270 pages
...rights of the minority. In our legislation we seem definitely committed to the governmental doctrine that the individual has no rights which the state is bound to respect. A few instances will suffice to illustrate the extent to which this doctrine has been carried in recent...
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Teaching of Communism in Public Schools of the District of Columbia ...

United States. Congress. House. Committee on the District of Columbia - 1936 - 296 pages
...an instrument of government will only come when the grimly pragmatic philosophy which assumes tliat the individual has no rights which the state is bound...Corroboration of these conditions comes from all impartial and •lisinterested sources. In April 1935 Robert L. ("Believe It or I^ot") Ripley delivered a radio address...
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Congressional Record: Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress, Volume 82

United States. Congress - 1938 - 756 pages
...that has not been away from democracy toward the concentration of power and In favor of the doctrine that the Individual has no rights which the state Is bound to respect. Wearied and wasted by war, but with old loyalties dissolved by the disillusionment of mass murder,...
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University of Pennsylvania Law Review and American Law Register, Volume 67

1919 - 216 pages
...law were fundamentally different from those of the Germanic law. According to the Roman conception, the individual has no rights which the State is bound to respect, whereas, according to the Germanic conception, personal rights follow the German individual everywhere...
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Illinois Law Review, Volume 12

1918 - 838 pages
...of the relation of the individual to the state is enlightening. "According to the Roman conception the individual has no rights which the state is bound to respect. This is forcibly illustrated by the well-known absolutism of the magistrate in the time 300 a ILLINOIS...
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