This essay addresses a series of (cultural and practical) caveats related to the legal changes pursued by Westerners outside the Western world. It also sketches out the overall cultural premises and attitudes underpinning these Western initiatives, and offers some empirical evidence of the above mentioned Western cultural posture and of the need to keep in mind the above caveats. Conclusions emphasize the role of comparative law technology as an indispensable tool to make sense of any phenomena seeking to, or actually producing legal change
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
The cultural sway of mainstream legal positivism may often drive the comparative scholar off the tra...
1noThe essay aims to review from a comparative law perspective the premises and postures underpinnin...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
The aim of this article is to re-consider the theoretical foundations of comparative law in the ligh...
This review essay draws on a recently edited handbook by Esin Orucu and David Nelken to reflect on t...
The effective development and operation of the law faces many obstacles. Among the more intractable ...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
While comparative law has become a key discipline, its instrumentalist use has turned out to be a po...
The effective development and operation of the law faces many obstacles. Among the more intractable ...
This paper examines the question of what values might underlie a global regimen of law. It is concer...
1Notwithstanding the well-known differences that run through cultures and traditions, the West has n...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
The cultural sway of mainstream legal positivism may often drive the comparative scholar off the tra...
1noThe essay aims to review from a comparative law perspective the premises and postures underpinnin...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...
The aim of this article is to re-consider the theoretical foundations of comparative law in the ligh...
This review essay draws on a recently edited handbook by Esin Orucu and David Nelken to reflect on t...
The effective development and operation of the law faces many obstacles. Among the more intractable ...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
While comparative law has become a key discipline, its instrumentalist use has turned out to be a po...
The effective development and operation of the law faces many obstacles. Among the more intractable ...
This paper examines the question of what values might underlie a global regimen of law. It is concer...
1Notwithstanding the well-known differences that run through cultures and traditions, the West has n...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
This introductory essay outlines the Special Issue’s aims and contents. After having offered a gener...