Cultural anthropology and sociological jurisprudence have shown thatthere is no culture or society without normative legal procedures forsettling the disputes of its people. Moreover, these legal proceduresvary in their normative ethical content. So different is this content fromculture to culture that the anthropologist Professor E. A. Hoebel hasfound it necessary to introduce seven normatively different sets of postulatesin order to describe the legal norms of seven so-called primitivepeoples. Such facts remind us that in comparative law and philosophyit is very dangerous to use the words good or just unless we specifyboth the culture to which we are referring and its specific set of normativeassumptions
The use of anthropology and sociology for dispute resolution, law-making, and governance has been fr...
International audienceThe use of anthropology and sociology for dispute resolution, law-making, and ...
Law may be perceived as consisting, ontologically, of a reflective relationship between two elements...
Cultural anthropology and sociological jurisprudence have shown thatthere is no culture or society w...
Sociology and anthropology of law were partly developed from inception to empirically address the co...
Sociology and anthropology of law were partly developed from inception to empirically address the co...
The aim of this article is to re-consider the theoretical foundations of comparative law in the ligh...
In recognition of the real and perceived differences between law and anthropology and in particular ...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
Why not see the law as a Roman tale analogically and imperialistically projected inside the study of...
The concepts of «legal system» and «legal culture» are traditionally developed by the science of the...
The paper entitled “Law and Philosophical Anthropology – Methodological Approach” has several object...
The cultural sway of mainstream legal positivism may often drive the comparative scholar off the tra...
Law and morality are not the same, but the related phenomena. The aforementioned difference requires...
Law and culture are inextricably linked. Hence, a meaningful comparison of laws will have to take in...
The use of anthropology and sociology for dispute resolution, law-making, and governance has been fr...
International audienceThe use of anthropology and sociology for dispute resolution, law-making, and ...
Law may be perceived as consisting, ontologically, of a reflective relationship between two elements...
Cultural anthropology and sociological jurisprudence have shown thatthere is no culture or society w...
Sociology and anthropology of law were partly developed from inception to empirically address the co...
Sociology and anthropology of law were partly developed from inception to empirically address the co...
The aim of this article is to re-consider the theoretical foundations of comparative law in the ligh...
In recognition of the real and perceived differences between law and anthropology and in particular ...
It is the aim of comparative law to examine the legal rules and patterns of order that drive a given...
Why not see the law as a Roman tale analogically and imperialistically projected inside the study of...
The concepts of «legal system» and «legal culture» are traditionally developed by the science of the...
The paper entitled “Law and Philosophical Anthropology – Methodological Approach” has several object...
The cultural sway of mainstream legal positivism may often drive the comparative scholar off the tra...
Law and morality are not the same, but the related phenomena. The aforementioned difference requires...
Law and culture are inextricably linked. Hence, a meaningful comparison of laws will have to take in...
The use of anthropology and sociology for dispute resolution, law-making, and governance has been fr...
International audienceThe use of anthropology and sociology for dispute resolution, law-making, and ...
Law may be perceived as consisting, ontologically, of a reflective relationship between two elements...