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      • Wild law is a groundbreaking approach to law that stresses human interconnectedness and dependence on nature. It critiques existing law for promoting environmental harm and seeks to establish a mutually enhancing human–Earth relationship.
      www.garn.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Burdon_Exploring_Wild_Law_extract_2011.pdf
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  2. May 16, 2024 · Where the Wild Things Are, illustrated childrens book by American writer and artist Maurice Sendak, published in 1963. The work was considered groundbreaking for its honest treatment of children’s emotions, especially anger, and it won the 1964 Caldecott Medal.

  3. The Law of the Wild is a 1934 American western serial film produced by Nat Levine, directed by B. Reeves Eason and Armand Schaefer, distributed by Mascot Pictures, and starring two famous animal stars, Rex the Wonder Horse and Rin Tin Tin Jr. as the serial's two leads.

  4. This chapter examines Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are, a piece of children's literature considered by many as one of the most influential stories for very young children on the cusp of literacy and on the verge of legality. Since its first publication in 1963, the book has gone through innumerable printings, been translated into ...

  5. Law of the Wild: Directed by B. Reeves Eason, Armand Schaefer. With Rex, Rin Tin Tin Jr., Ben Turpin, Bob Custer. Rex, a wild stallion, and Rinty, a police dog, are pals. Their master , John Sheldon, is framed for murder, and Alice Ingram plans to race Rex for money to pay for John's legal defense.

    • (99)
    • Action, Crime, Western
    • B. Reeves Eason, Armand Schaefer
    • 1934-09-05
  6. (human) law and society – to one that is more sensitive to what makes wilderness so. This article suggests that animal autonomy can take two forms in EU law, both of which are reflected (very implicitly and incipiently) in the case law of the Court on the Habitats Directive. The first focuses

  7. May 23, 2023 · Where the Wild Things Are is number one on BBC Culture's poll of the greatest children's books. Imogen Carter explores its appeal.

  8. Sendak's book is about the emergence of law and the story respects children's behaviour and represents not only their intelligence but their emotional ambivalence.

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