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Glanville Llewelyn Williams QC (Hon) FBA (15 February 1911 – 10 April 1997) was a Welsh legal scholar who was the Rouse Ball Professor of English Law at the University of Cambridge from 1968 to 1978 and the Quain Professor of Jurisprudence at University College, London, from 1945 to 1955. He has been described as Britain's foremost scholar of ...
The first eleven editions are by Glanville Williams. The First and Second Editions were published in 1945, the Third in 1950, the Fourth in 1953, the Fifth in 1954, the Sixth in 1957, the Seventh in 1963, the Eighth in 1969, the Ninth in 1973, the Tenth in 1978, the Eleventh in 1982, the Twelfth in 2002, the Thirteenth in 2006, the Fourteenth ...
Jacob Glanville, co-founder of Distributed Bio; James Glanville (1891–1958), British politician; Jason Glanville, leader in Australian Indigenous community; Jerry Glanville (born 1941), American football coach; Sir John Glanville (judge) (1542–1600), English Member of Parliament and judge; Sir John Glanville (1586–1661), English politician
He then filed another motion for Glanville to recuse himself as he believed that the judge was "acting unethical" and "morphed" into the prosecutor. [65] Glanville denied the motion [66] and the trial was paused on July 1 until a higher court ruled on the recusal. [67] Exactly two weeks later, Glanville was recused from the trial.
Glanville Williams: 1968: 1977 Sir William Wade: 1978: 1983 Sir David Williams: 1984: 1992 Sir Jack Beatson: 1993: 2003 David Feldman: 2004: 2018 Louise Gullifer ...
In The Aims of the Law of Tort (1951), [47] Glanville Williams saw four possible bases on which different torts rested: appeasement, justice, deterrence and compensation. From the late 1950s a group of legally oriented economists and economically oriented lawyers emphasised incentives and deterrence, and identified the aim of tort as being the ...
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Sir William Henry Glanville CB CBE FRS [1] (1 February 1900 – 30 June 1976) was a British civil engineer. [2] During World War II he and the Road Research Laboratory were involved in important war work, developing temporary runways, beach analysis, and tank and aircraft design.