Biographical notices
I. On the sphere and functions of an academical faculty of law
II. Professor Aytoun
III. The German war
IV. Reasons for the study of jurisprudence as a science
V. The international significance of recent events ; the Franco-German war
VI. Monarchy, republicanism, and democracy
VII. The institute of international law founded at Ghent
VIII. The " three rules of Washington " viewed in their relation to international arbitration
IX. English and foreign jurists and international jurisprudence
X. Of the denation alisation of Constantinople, and its devotion to international purposes
XI. Does the Corân supply an ethical basis on which a political superstructure can be raised?
XII. Prolegomena to a reasoned system of international law,
XIII. The land question in its social and political aspects
XIV. Of the idea of the family in modern society
XV. Centralisation and decentralisation
XVI. Politics as a profession
XVII. The story of the chair of public law in the university of Edinburgh
XVIII. The faculty of law
XIX. The church and the bar.