One of the arguably unexpected legal developments during the first decade of this century has been the emergence of new common law jurisdictions in a region with a very different legal heritage – the Arabian Peninsula. These young jurisdictions have been created specifically to foster the growth of new hubs for banking and finance. This article will examine these new adventures of the common law
One of the tools and consequences of colonialism was the export of law and the subsequent legacy of ...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
Great men have admonished us never to forget the continuing relevance of history in the Anglo-Americ...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...
In England, during the first half of the seventeenth century a serious conflict having both legal an...
The majority of Western systems of private law is habitually divided by scholars into civil law syst...
The author has made this, as he says, book-sized topic into a compact sketch of the potential influe...
The article analyzes the developments of African law in a comparative perspective, considering how t...
Recent cross-national studies of the institutional prerequisites of economic growth have identified ...
The Commonwealth Legal Information Institute (CommonLII – www.commonlii.org – pronounced &...
This article focuses on several distinctive features of the common law tradition. It first underscor...
In negotiations leading to independence, the British government and local representatives explored w...
International audienceAmerican law and English law belong to the same legal tradition, called the co...
The distribution of the common law was conditioned by a colonial strategy sensitive to the colonies’...
Can Western-based, English-speaking, common law commercial courts operate successfully in an environ...
One of the tools and consequences of colonialism was the export of law and the subsequent legacy of ...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
Great men have admonished us never to forget the continuing relevance of history in the Anglo-Americ...
The Common Law is a body of law, developed over time from the decisions and practices of courts, upo...
In England, during the first half of the seventeenth century a serious conflict having both legal an...
The majority of Western systems of private law is habitually divided by scholars into civil law syst...
The author has made this, as he says, book-sized topic into a compact sketch of the potential influe...
The article analyzes the developments of African law in a comparative perspective, considering how t...
Recent cross-national studies of the institutional prerequisites of economic growth have identified ...
The Commonwealth Legal Information Institute (CommonLII – www.commonlii.org – pronounced &...
This article focuses on several distinctive features of the common law tradition. It first underscor...
In negotiations leading to independence, the British government and local representatives explored w...
International audienceAmerican law and English law belong to the same legal tradition, called the co...
The distribution of the common law was conditioned by a colonial strategy sensitive to the colonies’...
Can Western-based, English-speaking, common law commercial courts operate successfully in an environ...
One of the tools and consequences of colonialism was the export of law and the subsequent legacy of ...
Article looks at a historical problem—the first use of case law by English royal justices in the thi...
Great men have admonished us never to forget the continuing relevance of history in the Anglo-Americ...