This paper deals with the study of law as an academic discipline, in two ways. First, the study of law within the university does not speak for itself: in contrast with classical Athens, where law was not at all considered to be a matter for specialists, or Norman England, where specialists with a vocational training came to deal with the ‘common law’, in continental Europe at the end of the 11th century the study of law developed into one of the core academic disciplines at the newly established universities, as a result of the revival of the Byzantine version of Roman law as the ius commune. Second, as an academic study, contrary to what is sometimes suggested, the methods available to its students are diverse. This paper shows that law c...
The article presents an excursion into the history of the origin of the scientific discipline of “c...
The subject of this paper is a question of general sociology because sociology is one of the most co...
The article starts with the observation of A.F. Chalmers, philosopher of science, that there is neit...
In the paper the author analyzes a topic that is relatively neglected in domestic legal theory, name...
textabstractThis paper traces the common history of European legal scholarship from its beginning in...
The idea of academic "discipline" has a long and venerable history, reaching back to the Renaissance...
This article seeks to move beyond pre‐existing critiques of legal education as ideological training....
The paper is an attempt to answer the fundamental question whether there is any rationale behind stu...
This article questions whether those outside law should take law seriously as an intellectual discip...
In the offered article the degree of influence of the Western Europe medieval universities on the pr...
The author seeks to give a sweeping discussion the study of law starting with the primitive sources ...
One of the major challenges for the teaching process is to give a course of a given discipline away ...
In the last thirty to forty years, interdisciplinary scholarship on law has significantly increased....
The nature and purpose of legal education has become a topic of intense debate in recent years. This...
The field of legal studies is undergoing rapid changes of a highly diverse nature. Increasing specia...
The article presents an excursion into the history of the origin of the scientific discipline of “c...
The subject of this paper is a question of general sociology because sociology is one of the most co...
The article starts with the observation of A.F. Chalmers, philosopher of science, that there is neit...
In the paper the author analyzes a topic that is relatively neglected in domestic legal theory, name...
textabstractThis paper traces the common history of European legal scholarship from its beginning in...
The idea of academic "discipline" has a long and venerable history, reaching back to the Renaissance...
This article seeks to move beyond pre‐existing critiques of legal education as ideological training....
The paper is an attempt to answer the fundamental question whether there is any rationale behind stu...
This article questions whether those outside law should take law seriously as an intellectual discip...
In the offered article the degree of influence of the Western Europe medieval universities on the pr...
The author seeks to give a sweeping discussion the study of law starting with the primitive sources ...
One of the major challenges for the teaching process is to give a course of a given discipline away ...
In the last thirty to forty years, interdisciplinary scholarship on law has significantly increased....
The nature and purpose of legal education has become a topic of intense debate in recent years. This...
The field of legal studies is undergoing rapid changes of a highly diverse nature. Increasing specia...
The article presents an excursion into the history of the origin of the scientific discipline of “c...
The subject of this paper is a question of general sociology because sociology is one of the most co...
The article starts with the observation of A.F. Chalmers, philosopher of science, that there is neit...