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Rethinking the Masters of Comparative Law (Paperback)
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Rethinking the Masters of Comparative Law (Paperback)
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Comparative Law is experiencing something of a renaissance,as legal
scholars and practitioners traditionally outside the discipline
find it newly relevant in projects such as constitution and code
drafting, the harmonization of laws, court decisions, or as a tool
for understanding the globalization of legal institutions. On the
other hand, comparativists within the discipline find themselves
asking questions about the identity of comparative law, what it is
that makes comparative law unique as a discipline, what is the way
forward. This book, designed with courses in comparative law as
well as scholarly projects in mind, brings a new generation of
comparativists together to reflect on the character of their
discipline. It aims to incite curiosity and debate about
contemporary issues within comparative law by bringing the
discipline into conversation with debates in anthropology, literary
and cultural studies, and critical theory. The book addresses
questions such as what is the disciplinary identity of comparative
law; how should we understand its relationship to colonialism,
modernism, the Cold War, and other wider events that have shaped
its history; what is its relationship to other projects of
comparison in the arts, social sciences and humanities; and how has
comparative law contributed at different times and in different
parts of the world to projects of legal reform. Each of the essays
frames its intervention around a close reading of the life and work
of one formative character in the history of the discipline. Taken
as a whole, the book offers a fresh and sophisticated picture of
the discipline and its future. Contents: Montesquieu: the specter
of despotism and the origins of comparative law (Robert Launay);
Max Weber and the uncertainties of categorical comparative law
(Ahmed White); Rethinking Hermann Kantorowicz: Free law, American
legal realism and the legacy of anti-formalism (Vivian Grosswald
Curran); Encountering amateurism: John Henry Wigmore and the uses
of American formalism (Annelise Riles); Nobushige Hozumi: A
skillful transplanter of western legal thought into Japanese soil
(Hitoshi Aoki); Sanhuri, comparative law and Islamic legal reform,
or why cultural authenticity is impossible (Amr Shalakany);
Sculpting the agenda of comparative law: Ernst Rabel and the facade
of language (David J. Gerber); Rene David: At the head of the
family (Jorge L. Esquirol); Postmodern-Structural Comparative
Jurisprudence? The aggregate impact of R. B. Schlesinger and R.
Sacco to the understanding of the legal order (Ugo Mattei).
General
Imprint: |
Hart Publishing
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Country of origin: |
United Kingdom |
Release date: |
October 2001 |
First published: |
2001 |
Editors: |
Annelise Riles
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Dimensions: |
234 x 156 x 14mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
274 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-84113-290-7 |
Categories: |
Books >
Law >
Jurisprudence & general issues >
Comparative law
|
LSN: |
1-84113-290-X |
Barcode: |
9781841132907 |
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