This book analyses enrichment law and its development and
underpinning in social culture within three geographical regions:
the United States, western members of the European Union and the
late Ottoman Empire. These regions correspond, though imperfectly,
with three different legal traditions: the American, continental
and Islamic traditions. The book argues that we should understand
law as a mimetic artefact. In so doing, it explains how typical
patterns and exemplary articulations of wrongful enrichment law
capture and reiterate vocal cultural themes found in the respective
regions. The book identifies remarkable affinities between poetic
tendencies, structures and default dispositions of wrongful
enrichment law and cultural world views. It offers bold accounts of
each region's law and culture providing fertile grounds for
external and comparative elucidations of the legal doctrine.
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