(Source: Routledge)
Routledge has published a new book on
comparative law, which includes several contributions with a legal historical
angle.
ABOUT THE BOOK
This book
discusses a number of important themes in comparative law: legal metaphors and
methodology, the movements of legal ideas and institutions and the mixity they
produce, and marriage, an area of law in which culture – or clashes of legal
and public cultures – may be particularly evident. In a mix of methodological
and empirical investigations divided by these themes, the work offers expanded
analyses and a unique cross-section of materials that is on the cutting edge of
comparative law scholarship. It presents an innovative approach to legal pluralism, the study of mixed
jurisdictions, and to language and the law, with the use of metaphors not as
illustration but core element of comparative methodology.
ABOUT THE
EDITORS
Jane Mair holds the position of Professor of
Private Law at the University of Glasgow, UK.
Seán Patrick Donlan is the Associate Dean of
the Thompson Rivers University, British Columbia, Canada.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Of Mixes, Movements, and Metaphors: Esin
Örücü’s Critical Comparative Law
Seán Patrick Donlan and Jane Mair
Island, Intersection, or In-Between? Legal
Hybridity and Diffusion in the Seychellois Legal Tradition, c1715-1950
Seán Patrick Donlan and Mathilda Twomey, CJ
Legislating for customary land tenure: a
comparative query
Sue Farran
Fairness and diversity in the South African law
of contract
Jacques du Plessis
On Kites and Ships: Climate Changes in
Comparative Law and Judicial Navigation
Werner Menski
On Lifelong and Fixed-term Marriage: a Study in
Estrangement
Jan M. Smits
What is the role of norms and values in the
reception of law?
Richard de Mulder and Helen Gubby
The Influence of the trias politica of
Montesquieu on the first Dutch Constitution
Emese von Bóné
A Legal Transplant: French Law in Dutch Shallow
Waters
Tammo Wallinga
The Rule of Law in Turkey: Two Steps Forward
One Step Back
Mustafa Koçak
The Method of Comparative Law reconsidered in
the light of Legal Epistemology and the Reception of Roman law
Laurens Winkel
Hybrid Law and Culinary Metaphor – Empty
Coquetting or Something Else?
Jaakko Husa
More info
here
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