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  1. The ‘Leges Iudiciariae’ of the Pre-Sullan Era.Miriam T. Griffin - 1973 - Classical Quarterly 23 (1):108-126.
    Mommsen invented the notion that the ancient sources provide clear evidence for placing the pre-Sullan laws affecting the iudicia publica in two distinct categories, i.e. laws affecting courts in general and laws affecting one court. Fraccaro demolished it, arguing that the term lex iudiciaria had no such precise meaning in the ancient authors and that all the laws to which it was applied, before the Lex Aurelia of 70, were, in fact, leges repetundarum.
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  • Cicero, Domestic Politics, and the First Action of the Verrines.Ann Vasaly - 2009 - Classical Antiquity 28 (1):101-137.
    In the First Action of the Verrines Cicero highlights the issue of judicial corruption, which appears to be leading to the passage of legislation ending the senatorial monopoly on composition of the juries in the quaestio de repetundis. The work might theoretically, therefore, furnish an important study of how Cicero publicly positioned himself on a key political issue at a crucial point in his career. Historians, however, often dismiss the political impact of the work, arguing that jury reform was essentially (...)
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