In Comparative Law as Transnational Law: A Decade of the German Law Journal, Russell A. Miller and Peer C. Zumbansen have assembled the works of scholars from around the world, forming a richly contextual demonstration of the increasing encounters and tensions among legal cultures. In recognizing the lack of consensus on how to define transnational law, Miller and Zumbansen have carefully selected works that originally appeared in the German Law Journal in order to help readers to grasp the challenges of defining transnational law, and to appreciate the differing approaches towards it. Some, for example, maintain that the processes of transnationalization has created a space for a new, discrete corpus of law--a field in its own right that i...
The paper aims at investigating the links between comparative law and legal translation. Comparative...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...
In Comparative Law as Transnational Law: A Decade of the German Law Journal, Russell A. Miller and P...
A project seeking to assert and contrast the ‘practice’ of comparative law in distinction from the w...
This chapter is the substantively revised and expanded version of the original contribution to the f...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Comparative law will not die in the 21st century, but nor can it remain unchanged. Comparative law a...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of schol...
There are many ways to theorize transnational law. As always, there is a mainstream, and there are “...
Comparative lawyers have for more than one-hundred years sought to increase the understanding of \u2...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
Law in a transnational context loses the features with which it has been configured since modernity....
Scholarship on EU law is well established but arguably lacks sensitivity to the methodological chara...
The paper aims at investigating the links between comparative law and legal translation. Comparative...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...
In Comparative Law as Transnational Law: A Decade of the German Law Journal, Russell A. Miller and P...
A project seeking to assert and contrast the ‘practice’ of comparative law in distinction from the w...
This chapter is the substantively revised and expanded version of the original contribution to the f...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Comparative law will not die in the 21st century, but nor can it remain unchanged. Comparative law a...
This chapter traces the development of the concept of Transnational Law since Philip Jessup\u27s Sto...
Transnational law, since its iteration by Philip Jessup in the 1950s, has inspired a league of schol...
There are many ways to theorize transnational law. As always, there is a mainstream, and there are “...
Comparative lawyers have for more than one-hundred years sought to increase the understanding of \u2...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
Law in a transnational context loses the features with which it has been configured since modernity....
Scholarship on EU law is well established but arguably lacks sensitivity to the methodological chara...
The paper aims at investigating the links between comparative law and legal translation. Comparative...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...