Legal pluralism may be simply defined as the development of a number of different legal traditions within a given sovereign territory. Legal pluralism is often held to be a challenge to legal centralism, a legal doctrine claiming that the state has a monopoly over law making in its sovereign space. Opponents of state centralism based on state sovereignty and a legal monopoly often regard it as an ideology rather than a legal doctrine. The modern critique of legal centralism is associated with an influential article ('What is Legal Pluralism?') by John Griffith ( 1986), but the origin of the theory of legal pluralism goes back to Eugen Ehrlich's Fundamental Principles of the Sociology of Law that was published in 1913. In many societies lega...