The latest Journal of Comparative Law (Wildy & Sons), a special issue on ‘interdisciplinary
study and comparative law’, is out.
The Guest
Editors are Nicholas HD Foster, Maria Federica Moscati, and
Michael Palmer.
The issue includes:
- Nicholas HD Foster, Maria Federica Moscati, and Michael Palmer, Introduction
- Eric Heinze, The Literary Model in Comparative Law: Shaespeare, Corneille, Racine
- Jaakko Husa, Interdisciplinary Comparative Law – Between Scylla and Charybdis?
- Dionysia Katelouzou, A Leximetric Approach to Comparative Corporate Governance: The Case of Hedge Fund Activism
- Karen McAuliffe, Translating Ambiguity
- Fernanda Pirie, Comparison in the Anthropology and History of Law
- Marian Roberts, A View from the Coal Face: Interdisciplinary Influences on Family Mediation in the United Kingdom
- Mathias Siems, Bringing in Foreign Ideas: The Quest for ‘Better Law’ in Implicity Comparative Law
- Florian Wagner-von Papp, Comparative Law & Economics and the ‘Egg-Laying Wool-Milk Sow’
- Gary Watt, The Poverty of Economics and the Hope for Humanities in Comparative Law
Articles
- c So’n BÙI Ngo. The Discourse of Constitutional Review in Vietnam
- Günter Frankenberg, The Innocence of Method – Unveiled: Comparison as an Ethical and Political Act
- Emily Lee, Comparing Hong Kong and Chinese Insolvency Laws and Their Cross-Border Complexities
- Peter Tillers, The Fabrication of Facts in Investigation and Adjudication
Noted
Publications
- Pierre Legrand, Noted Publications
Reviews
- Ross Cranston, Simon Roberts. A Court in the City. Civil and Commercial Litigation at the Beginning of the 21st Century
- Patricia NG, Lindblom, Anna-Karin, Non-Governmental Organisations in International Law
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