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  1. Felix Solomon Cohen (July 3, 1907 – October 19, 1953) was an American lawyer and scholar who made a lasting mark on legal philosophy and fundamentally shaped federal Indian law and policy. Biography. Felix S. Cohen was born in Manhattan, New York in 1907 and grew up in Yonkers.

  2. LEGAL THOUGHT OF FELIX S. COHEN. Martin P. Goldingt. INTRODUCTION. "The term 'legal realism' emerged about 1930 as a label for the lively and somewhat heterodox legal theories of a group of American law teachers and lawyers who diverged from each other in many respects and yet had much in common."

  3. 1 de jun. de 2008 · Felix S. Cohenlawyer, philosopher, and New Dealer as well as the son of the philosopher and legal theorist Morris R. Cohen—has long deserved a full-length intellectual biography, and more than half a century after his death Dalia Tsuk Mitchell has finally, and quite ably, given him his due.

  4. The Felix S. Cohen papers document the legal, academic, and scholarly career of Felix S. Cohen. The collection documents Cohen’s work as a legislative draftsman and solicitor for the Department of the Interior, including the drafting of the Wheeler-Howard Act (also called the Indian Reorganization Act) of 1934 and the Indians Claims ...

  5. 3 de nov. de 2006 · The Legal Conscience Selected Papers Of Felix S Cohen. by. Felix S. Cohen. Publication date. 1960. Publisher. Yale University Press. Collection. universallibrary.

  6. Abstract: The papers document Felix S. Cohen's professional career as a civil servant, private attorney, law professor, and author. From 1933-1957, Cohen drafted legislation for the Department of Interior, most notably the Wheeler-Howard Indian Reorganization Act of 1934.

  7. The philosopher, legal scholar, and lawyer Felix Solomon Cohen lived a life dedicated to the promotion of a particular vision of the modern American state—a vision of legal pluralism. This image of the state had a profound influence on the transformation of law in the first half of the twentieth century.