Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the preserve of a few specialists, often emigres from Europe.1 On occasion, a legal scholar from another field would consider and employ comparative methods, but for the most part American legal scholars focused only on domestic legal matters from domestic perspectives. If they did tend to look further afield, it was usually to consider legal issues in England or, less often, in other common law or English language legal systems. Practitioners and policy makers were not any more sophisticated, and, in fact, were likely even more parochial. Today, however, certain factors, chief among them the accelerating rate of globalization, are forcing a change i...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
Comparative Legal Research (CLR) is a valuable tool for legal research because it expands the histor...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
The legal community in the United States has good reasons to be interested in the laws of other nati...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
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...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...
Comparative law is a thriving area in the study of t he law which has attracted, in the last decades...
Comparative law, an important legal method, is becoming ever more relevant in a globalized world. Di...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
This Essay highlights the importance of comparative legal analysis with particular emphasis on the r...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
Comparative Legal Research (CLR) is a valuable tool for legal research because it expands the histor...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
The legal community in the United States has good reasons to be interested in the laws of other nati...
The starting point of comparative law is often the detection of similar social problems in diverse l...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
Contemporary comparative law and comparative legal scholarship have generally been marked by constru...
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...
Comparative law is much more than “matching laws.” Professor Grossfield’s short, lively book will ce...
Comparative law is a thriving area in the study of t he law which has attracted, in the last decades...
Comparative law, an important legal method, is becoming ever more relevant in a globalized world. Di...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
This Essay highlights the importance of comparative legal analysis with particular emphasis on the r...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
The globalisation of the legal profession and the interrelationship of the legal world are among the...
Comparative Legal Research (CLR) is a valuable tool for legal research because it expands the histor...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...