(image source: Routledge/Taylor&Francis)
The society's journal Comparative Legal History (Routledge/Taylor & Francis) published its second issue.
Our members receive a copy as part of their annual membership fee.
Table of contents:
Editorial (Heikki Pihlajamäkki & Aniceto Masferrer)
Codification as nationalisation or denationalisation of law: the Spanish case in comparative perspective (Aniceto Masferrer)
The United Kingdom and Imperial federation, 1900 to 1939: a precedent for British legal relations with the European Union? (Thomas Mohr)
Forced money: legal development of a criminal economic rule (Dror Goldberg)
Orientalist reflections in early Israeli law: (new) perspectives on the issue of polygamy (Omer Aloni)
Book reviews:
The shape of the state in Medieval Scotland, 1124–1290 (Andrew RC Simpson)
The right to wage war (jus ad bellum): the German reception of Grotius 50 years after De iure belli ac pacis (Sören Koch)
Vangnet of springplank? Het buitencontractuele aansprakelijkheidsrecht in een moderne samenleving (1804-heden) (Lotte Meurkens)
Magna Carta (Anthony Musson)
The Trial and crucifixion of Jesus: texts and commentary (Wim Decock)
Le Code Noir: Idées reçues sur un texte symbolique (Adriana Chira)
The method and culture of comparative law: essays in honour of Marc Van Hoecke (Jöorg Fedtke)
Political imprisonment and the Irish, 1912-1921 (Richard McMahon)
More information with T&F online.
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