It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given society. For subjects of a particular legal system, this is a question of acculturation. Being the product of a culture, we often intuitively sense the hidden forces that play out below the surface of the external manifestation of law. Therefore, this task becomes more difficult when we find ourselves dealing with a foreign legal system. We must then call upon the tools of the anthropologist or archeologist: studying the underlying substrata of data that lie within a culture
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
Part II will lay out the methodology of comparative law. My proposal for comparative methodology con...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
The central questions of comparative law are still unsolved: Which legal institutions in what legal ...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
Comparative law, like comparative government in general,\u27 has largely confined itself to unintegr...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
The aim of this article is to re-consider the theoretical foundations of comparative law in the ligh...
Comparative law is a discipline that focuses on the rules governing various legal systems in order t...
This article begins with a critique of the present methods of comparative criminal study. Specifical...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
This article is from the lecture series, Problems in Comparative Law, delivered at the Indiana Unive...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
Part II will lay out the methodology of comparative law. My proposal for comparative methodology con...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
The central questions of comparative law are still unsolved: Which legal institutions in what legal ...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
Comparative law, like comparative government in general,\u27 has largely confined itself to unintegr...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
The aim of this article is to re-consider the theoretical foundations of comparative law in the ligh...
Comparative law is a discipline that focuses on the rules governing various legal systems in order t...
This article begins with a critique of the present methods of comparative criminal study. Specifical...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
This article is from the lecture series, Problems in Comparative Law, delivered at the Indiana Unive...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...