This Article explores the competition that exists between U.S. and German legal cultures and examines Chilean legal reform efforts since the late 1990s as a case study of this competition. A country\u27s legal culture is comprised of the self-governing rules and operations of national and regional bar associations, the format of legal education, the structure of the legal and judicial profession, the role of the judiciary, jurisprudential style, and the reputation of the legal sector according to the general public. The influence of predominant legal cultures on developing nations has been explored in a number of contexts, while the importance of fostering an effective legal culture has been noted in clinical legal education and in legal pr...
This Article asserts that judicial exchange rather than dominance has inherent advantages as a techn...
These remarks explore areas of judicial reform in Europe and Latin America. Particular attention is ...
The North-South global divide is as much about perception and prejudice as it is about economic disp...
This Article explores the competition that exists between U.S. and German legal cultures and examine...
This article is about developing the rule of law in Latin America using popular popular culture and ...
I am uncertain about how LatCrits think about the legal cultures of Latin America and the United Sta...
What has to change is the model of work. It can\u27t be that in order to be a partner in a law firm,...
This Article explores the implications of different proposals for reforms by emphasizing a perspecti...
Globalization of the world markets is the impetus behind this Article\u27s call to law schools to in...
The article explores multiculturalism and comparative law within law schools in Argentina, and inclu...
This article critically examines the contemporary ‘securitization paradigm’ adopted throughout the C...
A Review of Legal Imperialism: American Lawyers and Foreign Aid in Latin America by James A. Gardne
On December 3, 2021, the Heidelberg Center for Latin America convened a group of academicians from a...
This article is an exercise in understanding of pluralistic legal thinking in law. The objective is ...
This article, written by Teresa M. Miguel-Stearns, explores the vast differences in judicial authori...
This Article asserts that judicial exchange rather than dominance has inherent advantages as a techn...
These remarks explore areas of judicial reform in Europe and Latin America. Particular attention is ...
The North-South global divide is as much about perception and prejudice as it is about economic disp...
This Article explores the competition that exists between U.S. and German legal cultures and examine...
This article is about developing the rule of law in Latin America using popular popular culture and ...
I am uncertain about how LatCrits think about the legal cultures of Latin America and the United Sta...
What has to change is the model of work. It can\u27t be that in order to be a partner in a law firm,...
This Article explores the implications of different proposals for reforms by emphasizing a perspecti...
Globalization of the world markets is the impetus behind this Article\u27s call to law schools to in...
The article explores multiculturalism and comparative law within law schools in Argentina, and inclu...
This article critically examines the contemporary ‘securitization paradigm’ adopted throughout the C...
A Review of Legal Imperialism: American Lawyers and Foreign Aid in Latin America by James A. Gardne
On December 3, 2021, the Heidelberg Center for Latin America convened a group of academicians from a...
This article is an exercise in understanding of pluralistic legal thinking in law. The objective is ...
This article, written by Teresa M. Miguel-Stearns, explores the vast differences in judicial authori...
This Article asserts that judicial exchange rather than dominance has inherent advantages as a techn...
These remarks explore areas of judicial reform in Europe and Latin America. Particular attention is ...
The North-South global divide is as much about perception and prejudice as it is about economic disp...