Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
Though it was begun in 1905 by a Princeton graduate, Whitney Darrow, and got its start printing the school’s Alumni Weekly, unlike most university presses owned or financially supported by universities, Princeton University Press (PUP) has always been privately owned and controlled.
PUP began in rented quarters above Marsh’s drugstore on Nassau Street in Princeton, New Jersey. Charles Scribner, a trustee of the University and a New York book publisher, contributed funds and land to the start-up.
Notably, PUP authors include Theodore Roosevelt, Joseph Campbell, and Stephen Hawking. Princeton University Press’s single most popular book is The I Ching, translated by Wilhelm / Baynes, which has more than 900,000 copies in print.
Details
41 William Street
Princeton, NJ 08540-5237
USA
Places of Publication
Published works
- Law’s order: what economics has to do with law and why it matters
- Justice in Luritz: experiencing socialist law in East Germany
- The reasonable man: Trollope’s legal fiction
- Historians and the law in postrevolutionary France
- The crisis of German democracy; a study of the spirit of the constitution of Weimar,
- Torah and law in Paradise lost
- The jurisprudence of John Marshall.
- Law, resistance, and the state: the opposition to Roman law in Reformation Germany
- Law, violence, and the possibility of justice
- The imperfect union: constitutional structures of German unification
- Law without nations?: why constitutional government requires sovereign states
- Religion and the Constitution
- The American Revolution in the law: Anglo-American jurisprudence before John Marshall
- Federal courts in the early Republic: Kentucky, 1789-1816
- Law and urban growth: civil litigation in the Boston trial courts, 1880-1900
- Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today
- Constitutional conflicts between Congress and the President
- American constitutionalism: from theory to politics
- The new constitutional order
- A matter of interpretation: federal courts and the law: an essay
- In defense of a political court
- Constitutional faith
- Taking the Constitution away from the courts
- That eminent tribunal: judicial supremacy and the constitution
- A Constitution of many minds: why the founding document doesn’t mean what it meant before
- Restoring the lost constitution: the presumption of liberty
- Great cases in constitutional law
- Constitutional dialogues: interpretation as political process
- Justice Rehnquist and the Constitution
- The commerce power versus states rights: “Back to the Constitution”
- The Supreme Court and sovereign states,
- Constitutional rights and powers of the people
- Supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today: Supreme Court decisions of 1973, 1974, 1975, and 1976
- 1979 supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today: Supreme Court decisions of 1977, 1978, and 1979
- Supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today: Supreme Court decisions of 1977 and 1978
- 1980 supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today: Supreme Court decisions of 1977 through 1980
- Supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today: Supreme Court decisions.
- 1978 supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The constitution and what it means today
- Edward S. Corwin’s the Constitution and what it means today. Supplement 1978., Supreme Court decisions of 1977 and 1978
- Edward S. Corwin’s the Constitution and what it means today. 1980 supplement: Supreme Court decisions of 1977 through 1980
- Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today. Supplement 1979, Supreme Court decisions of 1977, 1978 and 1979
- Franz Kafka: the office writings
- The Whilton dispute, 1264-1380: a social-legal study of dispute settlement in medieval England
- Twelve good men and true: the criminal trial jury in England, 1200-1800
- If not, not: the oath of the Aragonese and the legendary laws of Sobrarbe
- Russian Lawyers and the Soviet State: the Origins and Development of the Soviet Bar, 1917-1939.
- Law and social change in Ghana
- The growth of the law in medieval Russia
- Essays on China’s legal tradition
- Chinese legal tradition under the Mongols: the Code of 1291 as reconstructed
- The Tʻang code
- The T’ang code. Volume II, Specific articles
- The T’ang Code 1. General principles
- The wheel of law: India’s secularism in comparative constitutional context
- The Tʻang code
- Kill all the lawyers?: Shakespeare’s legal appeal
- Chinese legal tradition under the mongols: the code of 1921 as reconstructed
- Numbers rule: the vexing mathematics of democracy, from Plato to the present
- The limits of constitutional democracy
- Brennan and Democracy.
- Court over Constitution; a study of judicial review as an instrument of popular government,
- Experiments in government and the essentials of the Constitution,
- Supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The constitution and what it means today: Supreme Court decisions of 1973, 1974, and 1975
- The Constitution and what it means today.
- Notes on constitutional government
- Supplement to Edward S. Corwin’s The Constitution and what it means today
- Edward S. Corwin’s the Constitution and what it means today. (Thirteenth edition.) Revised by Harold W. Chase and Craig R. Ducat, etc.