This article by Basil Markesinis and Jorg Fedtke may be a turning point. It will encourage generations of judges to try the path of comparative law. We may have here the beginning of an intellectual revolution. In the past, we had the following phenomena: Judges did not tend to rely on comparative law; lawyers did not cite comparative law to judges; law schools did not stress comparative law; scholars did not emphasize comparative law; judges did not tend to rely on comparative law; and so on. This vicious circle is coming to its end. Judges will start to rely on comparative law; lawyers will tend to cite it to judges; law schools will start teaching comparative law; scholars will be encouraged to research in comparative law; judges will re...
This article accompanies a Roadmap on the judicial use of comparative law, which was developed by ju...
Part II will lay out the methodology of comparative law. My proposal for comparative methodology con...
For most of the twentieth century, the dominant paradigm in comparative public law was particularism...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
This article focuses on the distinctions that the ad hoc Tribunals have drawn between the comparativ...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
This article is from the lecture series, Problems in Comparative Law, delivered at the Indiana Unive...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...
Despite the tremendous renaissance of comparative constitutional law, the comparative aspect of the ...
Despite the tremendous renaissance of comparative constitutional law, the comparative aspect of the ...
Justice Breyer\u27s new book The Court and the World presents a number of productive challenges. Fir...
The explosion of scholarship in comparative constitutional law in the last decade tends to overshado...
The explosion of scholarship in comparative constitutional law in the last decade tends to overshado...
This article accompanies a Roadmap on the judicial use of comparative law, which was developed by ju...
Part II will lay out the methodology of comparative law. My proposal for comparative methodology con...
For most of the twentieth century, the dominant paradigm in comparative public law was particularism...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
This article focuses on the distinctions that the ad hoc Tribunals have drawn between the comparativ...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
This article is from the lecture series, Problems in Comparative Law, delivered at the Indiana Unive...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...
Despite the tremendous renaissance of comparative constitutional law, the comparative aspect of the ...
Despite the tremendous renaissance of comparative constitutional law, the comparative aspect of the ...
Justice Breyer\u27s new book The Court and the World presents a number of productive challenges. Fir...
The explosion of scholarship in comparative constitutional law in the last decade tends to overshado...
The explosion of scholarship in comparative constitutional law in the last decade tends to overshado...
This article accompanies a Roadmap on the judicial use of comparative law, which was developed by ju...
Part II will lay out the methodology of comparative law. My proposal for comparative methodology con...
For most of the twentieth century, the dominant paradigm in comparative public law was particularism...