In addition to the upcoming Irish Society of Comparative Law Conference this Friday and Saturday, a Workshop on JURISDICTIONAL COMPLEXITY IN WESTERN LEGAL HISTORY will take place at the University of Limerick next Monday.
The project abstract is here. The first paragraph reads:
Western le gal
historie s are
fre que ntly
told as ve ry simplistic and whiggish
tale s. The y
highlight common laws at the e xpe nse of both myriad, laye re d local laws and othe r,
le ss formal, normative orde rs.
But the cre ation of ge nuine ly ge ne ral national laws, a le gal
‘syste m’ ce ntre d
on the state ,
and the e limination
of compe ting jurisdictions and marginalisation
of non-le gal norms was a ve ry long historical proce ss.
Inde e d,
the ide as
and institutions of many of the compe titors of national law have
survive d into the pre se nt.
Be cause the historical
and conte mporary importance of the se jurisdictions is not re fle cte d in
curre nt historiography, the propose d
volume in comparative le gal
history will e xamine We ste rn jural comple xity
from the sixte e nth through the
nine te e nth ce ntury.
Only the study of the se
marginalise d normative orde rs—e ach worthy of study in the ir
own right—will provide us with the appropriate
conte xt ne ce ssary to unde rstand
the laws that have continue d
into the pre se nt pe riod.
The ir failure s
will te ll us much about the succe sse s of our conte mporary
common laws.
The Workshop is led by me and Dirk Heirbaut (Ghent). We met in Ghent last year and hope to publish the collection next year. We have been generously supported by the Gerda Henkel Foundation
Contact me for additional information.
The project abstract is here. The first paragraph reads:
Western l
The Workshop is led by me and Dirk Heirbaut (Ghent). We met in Ghent last year and hope to publish the collection next year. We have been generously supported by the Gerda Henkel Foundation
Contact me for additional information.
No comments:
Post a Comment