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Reviews for The Development of Employment Law: The State, the Judges and the Workers, 1820-1970

 The Development of Employment Law magazine reviews

The average rating for The Development of Employment Law: The State, the Judges and the Workers, 1820-1970 based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-11-20 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Jun Igarashi
The edition that I have of this book is very old. It has no ISBN or published date. The binding has come off of the spine on the top, there is a partial document showing about the metric system. Looks like it was used as the underbinding of the book. Kind of cool. The pages are very thick. There is nothing on the spine to tell me what the book is. It's one of those old ones you see by the hundreds on the back shelves of book stores where you can't get to it easily & soon tire of pulling each one looking for a treasure. I don't recall if that is how I found this one or if it came from my grandfather. Either of us were likely to spend an hour doing something like that, though. Anyway, I'm finally getting around to reading it. It is Sir Walter Scott writing a history of Scotland to his grandson. He tells the story from the Roman occupation splitting the isle, then MacBeth's story. Now I'm reading about how Longshanks, Edward I, decided to get Scotland for his own. It's a good book, but there are too many others in its way right now. I spent as much time getting back up to date on it as I did reading last night. I'm going to shelve it for now & pick it up again later. It's a re-read, although it's been 30 years or more since I last read it. Too many new books.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-04-10 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Matthew Carroll
Jeff of Weber Antiquarian Books, gave his mother this 286 page book about 2010. though it had a damaged spine and faded cover, it dealt with the Scotland from which came Natalie's father's forebears. Natalie's copy was published 1885 in Boston, abridged and published by Edwin Ginn in the 'Home and School Library,' with twenty six chapters, this being Natalie's copy of a 1903 printing. "In May 1827, Scott had the idea of writing a History of Scotland addressed to his six-year-old grandchild John Hugh Lockhart whom he called by the nickname of 'Hugh Littlejohn'. The project was partly inspired by the success of John Wilson Croker's 'Stories Selected from the History of England' (1822). Sir Walter Scott felt that Croker underestimated the intelligence of his juvenile audience. Children, Scott believed, disliked books 'written down' to their level, preferring a challenge to their understanding and curiosity. He hoped to cater, moreover, for both a juvenile and a popular audience and thus to find a way 'between what a child can comprehend and what shall not yet be absolutely uninteresting to the grown reader'." I judge this book to be a very good concise military and political (who gets in charge and who follows in control) history from 1033 to 1540, naturally written from the honest view and bias of intelligent Scots. It is a pleasure to read, moves apace, very smoothly, clear in its chronological progression, and sufficient in its treatment of historically prominent figures such as Macbeth in 1033, David the First in 1093, Sir William Wallace in 1296, and King Robert the Bruce from 1305 to 1330. The Bruce with 30,000 men totally defeated at Bannockburn an English army of over 100,000, and drove the English survivors well back south of the Scottish border. Scott's history for the next 200 years turns then to more dismal fighting, siege of Lochleven Castle, tournaments, return and death of King David II in 1370, Robert II, James II, James III, a King's murder, Battle of Flodden in 1513, death of James IV, and ends with James V who sired the daughter who became Mary Queen of Scots and then james died at age thirty one in 1540. James is generally regarded as the most successful of the Stewart monarchs of Scotland, but his reign ended in a disastrous defeat at the Battle of Flodden. He was the last monarch from Great Britain to be killed in battle. King James IV of Scotland’s death "meant a minor noble ascended the throne (an unfortunately familiar tale in Scottish history) causing a new era of political instability for the Scottish nation." James IV's marriage in 1503 to Margaret Tudor linked the royal houses of Scotland and England. It led to the Union of the Crowns in 1603, when Elizabeth I died without heirs and James IV's great-grandson James VI succeeded to the English throne as James I. For a person like I, the few pages given to these and other rulers interregnum were quite enough to understand the European scene of French, German, Danish and Norwegian conniving and military forces, and internally to Scotland the turmoil and frequent battles which gave Scotland such harsh times and often cruel conditions back in those centuries when the peasants did their utmost to survive in a harsh land.


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