The aim of this paper is to assess the influence of the Italian comparative law scholarship outside its national boundaries, and particularly in Latin America, where it has had its strongest impact. In order to achieve our goal we will start by sketching a picture of the current status of the Italian comparative law, tracing its roots, explaining its development and analyzing its weaknesses and strengths. After exploring its reception in South America, we will ultimately try to envisage the future challenges, directions and contributions of the Italian Theory – as we labeled the Italian comparative law “way”
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
The aim of this paper is to assess the influence of the Italian comparative law scholarship outside...
The comparative law was born in Italy as a "revolt" against formalism and against dogmatism. What is...
In the last few decades, we have witnessed the renaissance of Comparative Constitutional law as fiel...
In 1943, Angelo Piero Sereni wrote The Italian Conception of International Law, a book explicitly ai...
This contribution discusses, from the perspective of global comparative law, how Mariano Croce’s Eng...
Should comparative methods be considered a classic tool for XIXe century Italian jurists ? Italian j...
The essay is aimed at demonstrating the extent to which comparative law, and the adoption of a compa...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...
This piece discusses the tension between internationalization of legal ordering and the growing pres...
National legal systems are not isolated from foreign influences. They are part of a “transnational l...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
Different forms of global phenomena and pluralism involve reconsidering the adequacy of the methods ...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
The aim of this paper is to assess the influence of the Italian comparative law scholarship outside...
The comparative law was born in Italy as a "revolt" against formalism and against dogmatism. What is...
In the last few decades, we have witnessed the renaissance of Comparative Constitutional law as fiel...
In 1943, Angelo Piero Sereni wrote The Italian Conception of International Law, a book explicitly ai...
This contribution discusses, from the perspective of global comparative law, how Mariano Croce’s Eng...
Should comparative methods be considered a classic tool for XIXe century Italian jurists ? Italian j...
The essay is aimed at demonstrating the extent to which comparative law, and the adoption of a compa...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...
This piece discusses the tension between internationalization of legal ordering and the growing pres...
National legal systems are not isolated from foreign influences. They are part of a “transnational l...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
Different forms of global phenomena and pluralism involve reconsidering the adequacy of the methods ...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...