First published in 1986, Jewish Jurisprudence is the second volume of an important series analysing and setting forth the substantive principles of Jewish jurisprudence. It encompasses the applicable sources of Jewish law from the original transmission to Moses on Sinai of the terse written law and its accompanying oral elaboration through its development to the present day. Each topic concludes with the authors’ view of the present status of the law. In former years, the public teaching and discussion of law occupied a prominent place in Jewish culture. Today, estrangement from the language of Halacha has made it less accessible to the general public. This series is an attempt to open the world of Jewish law to the layperson, general scholars and specialists in jurisprudence.
Table of Contents of Volume 1 3. The Numerical Composition of the Courts 4. The Manner in Which a Person May Engage in Self-Help 5. When Court Sessions May Be Held 6. The Minimum Monetary Jurisdiction of the Court Summary of Legal Principles Contained in Volume 2 Citation Index Subject Index
Neil S. Hecht, N. S. Hecht, B. S. Jackson, S. M. Passamaneck, Daniela Piattelli, Alfredo Rabello, Professor) Hecht, N. S. (Professor, Liverpool University) Jackson, B. S. (Queen Victoria Professor of Law, Queen Victoria Professor of Law, Los Angeles) Passamaneck, S. M. (Professor of Rabbinic Literature, Hebrew Union College, Professor of Rabbinic Literature, Hebrew Union College, Jewish Institute of Religion, Universita di Salerno) Piattelli, Daniela (Professore di Diritto dell'antico Oriente Mediterraneo, Professore di Diritto dell'antico Oriente Mediterraneo, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem) Rabello, Alfredo (Montesquieu Professor of Comparative Law and Legal History and Director of the Sacher Institute, Montesquieu Professor of Comparative Law and Legal History and Director of the Sacher Institute, Steve Passamaneck