Comparative law will not die in the 21st century, but nor can it remain unchanged. Comparative law as we have it today still retains its roots in 1900: it is focused on states, on positive law, and on a scientific approach. Comparative law in the age of transnationalism will have to transnationalize: it must move beyond the state, it must move beyond positive law, and it must endorse cultural approaches. We must retain our critique of legal nationalism, but we must add our critique of uncritical legal universalism
This fully revised and updated second edition of The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law provides a w...
In the course of this conference on new approaches to comparative law; it has struck me as curious...
In this paper the author will commence his analysis by exposing the apparent absence of a global law...
Comparative law will not die in the 21st century, but nor can it remain unchanged. Comparative law a...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
This piece discusses the tension between internationalization of legal ordering and the growing pres...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...
Over the past 15 years, comparative law has undergone a dramatic and profound metamorphosis. The aca...
In Comparative Law as Transnational Law: A Decade of the German Law Journal, Russell A. Miller and P...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
A project seeking to assert and contrast the ‘practice’ of comparative law in distinction from the w...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
At a time when world society is becoming increasingly mobile and legal life is internationalized, th...
This fully revised and updated second edition of The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law provides a w...
In the course of this conference on new approaches to comparative law; it has struck me as curious...
In this paper the author will commence his analysis by exposing the apparent absence of a global law...
Comparative law will not die in the 21st century, but nor can it remain unchanged. Comparative law a...
Given globalization, transnationalism and postcolonialism, not to mention the Europeanization of law...
This piece discusses the tension between internationalization of legal ordering and the growing pres...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...
Over the past 15 years, comparative law has undergone a dramatic and profound metamorphosis. The aca...
In Comparative Law as Transnational Law: A Decade of the German Law Journal, Russell A. Miller and P...
Preprint of an article by Paul Norman, former Reference and Online Services Librarian at the Institu...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
A project seeking to assert and contrast the ‘practice’ of comparative law in distinction from the w...
Fifty years ago comparative law was a field in search of a paradigm. In the inaugural issue of the A...
At a time when world society is becoming increasingly mobile and legal life is internationalized, th...
This fully revised and updated second edition of The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law provides a w...
In the course of this conference on new approaches to comparative law; it has struck me as curious...
In this paper the author will commence his analysis by exposing the apparent absence of a global law...