LAW 157 



In the law schools, Criminal Law receives in general 

 more attention than in any American law school. At 

 Paris, there are two professors, GAR^ON, who has anno- 

 tated the Code Penal, and LE POITTEVIN, who has 

 annotated the Code d' Instruction Criminelle; the latter 

 has also published elaborate practical treatises on Crim- 

 inal Procedure, Police Procedure, and Judicial Records; 

 both give alternately a course in Comparative Criminal 

 Law. The masterly treatise of SALEILLES (recently 

 deceased; one of France's most famous modern jurists), 

 on "The Individualization of Punishment," has been 

 translated into English for an American Committee, in 

 the Modern Criminal Science Series. 



At Lyon is GARRAUD, the best known criminal jurist 

 of France. Enough to say that his two treatises on 

 Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure (six volumes 

 each, now appearing in their second and third editions) 

 are the most nearly perfect of their kind in any language. 

 At Bordeaux is BONNECASE; at Caen, DEGOIS; at Dijon, 

 Roux; at Grenoble, GUETAT; at Lille, DEMOGUE; at 

 Rennes, CHAUVEAU; at "Toulouse, MAGNOL; at Mont- 

 pellier, LABORDE, who offers a special course in Criminal 

 Procedure and Penal Methods. 



International Law and Public Law. The general 

 activities and the university instruction in these two 

 fields are so fully set forth in the chapter on Political 

 Science, in this book, that a repetition here is needless. 

 Suffice it to say that in each of them the student of law 

 will find the most extensive and helpful opportunities. 



General Legal Subjects. In addition to the foregoing 

 subjects of supranational interest, the American student 

 will find a valuable field for comparison in the courses 

 on distinctively national law, both in the arrangement of 



