Comparative legal history
This research review has been written to serve two purposes. The first is to explain the coming-to-be of comparative legal history as a scholarly practice in both its European and its extra-European emphases. The second is to present exemplary research representing not only the comparative perspecti...
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| Language: | English |
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Cheltenham, UK :
Edward Elgar Publishing Limited,
2021
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| ISBN: | 9781789909913 (e-book) |
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Table of Contents:
- Recommended readings (Machine generated): 1.Frederick Pollock (1903), 'The History of Comparative Jurisprudence', Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation, 5 (1), 74-89[16]
- 2.Harold Dexter Hazeltine (1927), 'The Study of Comparative Legal History', Journal of the Society of Public Teachers of Law [old series], 27-36[10]
- 3.Walther Hug (1932), 'The History of Comparative Law', Harvard Law Review, 45, 1027-70[44]
- 4.Roscoe Pound, 'Comparative Law in Space and Time', American Journal of Comparative Law, 4, 70-84[15]
- 5.Bernard S. Jackson (1968), 'Evolution and Foreign Influence in Ancient Law', American Journal of Comparative Law, 16, 372-90[23]
- 6.Reiner Schulze (1992), 'European Legal History - A New Field of Research in Germany', Journal of Legal History, 13 (3), 270-295[26]
- 7.Reinhard Zimmerman (1996), 'Savigny's Legacy: Legal History, Comparative Law and the Emergence of a European Legal Science', Law Quarterly Review, 112, 576-605[30]
- 8.D.J. Osler (1997), 'The Myth of European Legal History', Rechtshistorisches Journal, 16, 393-410[18]
- 9.Pierre LeGrand (1998), 'Are Civilians Educable?', Legal Studies 18 (2), 216-30[15]
- 10.Julius Goebel (1931), 'King's Law and Local Custom in Seventeenth Century New England', Columbia Law Review, 31 (3), 416-48[32]
- 11.George L. Haskins (1983), 'Influences of New England Law on the Middle Colonies', Law and History Review, 1 (2), Fall, 238-50[13]
- 12.Charles Donahue Junior (1997), 'Comparative Legal History in North America: A Report', Tijdschift Voor Rechtsgeschiedenis, 1-17[17]
- 13.Mathias Reimann and Alain Levasseur (1998), 'Comparative Law and Legal History in the United States', American Journal of Comparative Law Supplement, 46, 1-15[15]
- 14.Philip Girard and Jim Philips (2011), 'Rethinking the Nation in National Legal History: A Canadian Perspective', Law and History Review, 29, (2), 607-26[20]
- 15.Gunter Frankenberg (1985), 'Critical Comparisons: Re-thinking Comparative Law', Harvard International Law Journal, 26 (2), Spring, 411-55[45]
- 16.Pierre Legrand (1996), 'How to Compare Now', Legal Studies, 16, 232-42[11]
- 17.Mathias Reimann (2002), 'The Progress and Failure of Comparative Law in the Second Half of the Twentieth Century', American Journal of Comparative Law, 50, 671-700[30]
- 18.Boaventura de Sousa Santos (1995), 'Three Metaphors for a New Conception of Law: The Frontier, the Baroque, and the South', Law and Society Review, 29 (4), 569-84[16]
- 19.Sally Engle Merry (1988), 'Legal Pluralism', Law and Society Review, 22 (5), 869-96[28].
- 20.Martha-Marie Kleinhans and Roderick A. Macdonald (1997), 'What Is a Critical Legal Pluralism?', Canadian Journal of Law and Society, 12 (2), Fall, 25-46[22]
- 21.Michele Graziadei (1999), 'Comparative Law, Legal History, and the Holistic Approach to Legal Cultures', Zeitschrift für Europäisches Privatrecht, 7, 531-43[13]
- 22.William Ewald (1999), 'Legal History and Comparative Law', Zeitschrift für Europäisches Privatrecht, 7, 553-9[13]
- 23.Dirk Heirbaut (2005), 'Comparative Law and Zimmermann's New Ius Commune: A Life Line or a Death Sentence for Legal History: Some Reflections on the Use of Legal History for Comparative Law and Vice Versa', Fundamina, 11, 136-53[18]
- 24.Martin Löhnig (2014), 'Comparative Law and Legal History: A Few Words about Comparative Legal History', in Maurice Adam and Dirk Heirbaut (eds), The Method and Culture of Comparative Law: Essays in Honour of Mark Van Hoecke, Oxford, UK: Hart Publishing, 113-20[8]
- 25.Thomas Duve (2018), 'Legal Traditions: A Dialogue between Comparative Law and Comparative Legal History', Comparative Legal History, 6 (1), 15-33[19]
- 26.Heikki Pihlajamäki (2018), 'Merging Comparative Law and Legal History: Towards an Integrated Discipline', American Journal of Comparative Law, 66, 733-50[18]
- 27.OZCAN (2000), 'Webbing the Pacific - Teaching an Intercontinental Legal History Course', Law and History Review, 18 (2), 445-56[12]
- 28.Kjell Å. Modéer (2011), 'Is European Comparative History Running Wild? From Function and Texts to Perspectives and Contexts', in Kjell Å. Modéer and Per Nilsén (eds), How to Teach European Comparative Legal History, Lund, Sweden: Juristförlaget i Lund, 13-9[7]
- 29.Kjell Å. Modéer (2014), 'The Deep Structures of European Normativity in a Global Context', Rechtsgeschichte / Legal History, 22, 275-81[7]
- 30.Jeffery G. Hewitt (2016), 'Decolonizing and Indigenizing: Some Considerations for Law Schools', Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice, 33, 65-84[20]
- 31.David Ibbetson (2012), 'Comparative Legal History: A Methodology," in Anthony Musson and Chantal Stebbings', in Anthony Musson and Chantal Stebbings (eds), Making Legal History: Approaches and Methodology, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 131-45[15]
- 32.Heikki Pihlajamäki (2015), 'Comparative Contexts in Legal History: Are We All Comparatists Now?', Seqüência, 70, 57-75[19]
- 33.Luigi Lacchè (2018), 'Crossing Boundaries: Comparative Constitutional History as a Space of Communication', Glossae: European Journal of Legal History, 15, 125-39[15]
- 34.Kjell Å. Modéer (2018), 'Abandoning the Nationalist Framework: Comparative Legal History', in Heikki Pihlajamäki, Markus D. Dubber, and Mark Godfrey (eds), The Oxford Handbook of European Legal History, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 100-14[15]
- 35.Andreas Their (2017), 'Time, Law, and Legal History - Some Observations and Considerations', Rechtsgeschichte / Legal History, 25, 20-44[25]
- 36.Seán Patrick Donlan (2011), 'Remembering: Legal Hybridity and Legal History', Comparative Law Review, 2, 1-35[35]
- 37.Lena Salaymeh (2015), 'Comparing' Jewish and Islamic Legal Traditions: Between Disciplinarity and Critical Historical Jurisprudence', Critical Analysis of Law, 2 (1), 153-72[20]
- 38.Lena Foljanty (2015), 'Legal Transfers as Processes of Cultural Translation: On the Consequences of a Metaphor', Max Planck Institute for European Legal History Research Paper Series, #2015-09, 1-18[18].
- 39.Genevieve Renard Painter (2017), 'A letter from the Haudenosaunee Confederacy to King George V: Writing and Reading Jurisdictions in International Legal History', London Review of International Law, 5 (1), March, 7-48[42]
- 40.Jean d'Aspremont (2019), 'Critical Histories of International Law and the Repression of Disciplinary Imagination', London Review of International Law, 7 (1), March, 89-115[27]
- 41.Dirk Heirbaut (2000), 'Europe and the People without Legal History: On the Need for a General History of Non-European Law', Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis / Revue d'Histoire du Droit / Legal History Review, 68 (3), 269-80[12]
- 42.Ron Harris (2016), 'Is It Time for Non-Euro-American Legal History?', American Journal of Legal History, 56, 60-5[6]
- 43.Thomas Duve (2013), 'European Legal History - Global Perspectives', Working Paper for the Colloquium 'European Normativity - Global Historical Perspectives', Max Planck Institute, September, 2nd-4th, 1-24[24]
- 44.Paul McHugh (2012), 'The Politics of Historiography and the Taxonomies of the Colonial Past', in Anthony Musson and Chantal Stebbings (eds), Making Legal History: Approaches and Methodology, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 163-95[33]
- 45.Renisa Mawani (2016), 'Law, Settler Colonialism, and the 'Forgotten Space' of Maritime Worlds', Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 12, 107-31[25]
- 46.Renisa Mawani (2018), 'Archival Legal History: Toward the Ocean as Archive', in Markus D. Dubber and Christopher Tomlins (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Legal History, Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 291-310[20]
- 47.Renisa Mawani and Iza Hussin (2014), 'The Travels of Law: Indian Ocean Itineraries', Law and History Review, 32 (4), 733-48[16]
- 48.Iza Hussin (2014), 'Circulations of Law: Cosmopolitan Elites, Global Repertoires, Local Vernaculars', Law and History Review, 32 (4), 773-95[23]
- 49.Christina Twomey (2017), 'Is Australian History Over-determined by the Transnational Turn?' in Alecia Simmonds, Anne Rees, and Anna Clark (eds), Transnationalism, Nationalism and Australian History, Singapore: Palgrave Macmillan, 89-101[13]
- 1.Ernst Rabel (1947), 'The Statute of Frauds and Comparative Legal History', Law Quarterly Review, 63, 174-87[14]
- 2.Hans Julius Wolff (1966), 'Debt and Assumpsit in the Light of Comparative Legal History', The Irish Jurist, 1 (2), Winter, 316-27[12]
- 3.Bernard S. Jackson (1970), 'Some Comparative Legal History: Robbery and Brigandage', Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, 1, 45-103[58]
- 4.Brett L. Shadle (1999), 'Changing Traditions to Meet Current Altering Conditions: Customary Law, African Courts and the Rejection of Codification in Kenya, 1930-60', Journal of African History, 40 (3), 411-31[21]
- 5.Genevieve Renard Painter (2017), 'When Is a Haida Sphinx: Thinking about Law with Things', Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly, 68, 391-402[12]
- 6.Assaf Likhovski (2003), 'Czernowitz, Lincoln, Jerusalem, and the Comparative History of American Jurisprudence', Theoretical Inquiries in Law, 4, 621-57[37]
- 7.Shaunnagh Dorsett (2009), 'Sworn on the Dirt of Graves: Sovereignty, Jurisdiction and the Judicial Abrogation of Barbarous Customs in New Zealand in the 1840s', Journal of Legal History, 30 (2), August, 175-97[23]
- 8.David M. Rabban (2013), 'American Responses to German Legal Scholarship: From the Civil War to World War I', Comparative Legal History, 1, 13-43[31].
- 9.Stefan K. Stantchev, 'Apply to Muslims What Was Said of the Jews: Popes and Canonists between a Taxonomy of Otherness and Infidelitas', Law and History Review, 32 (1), 65-96[32]
- 10.Katharina Isabel Schmidt (2016), 'Law, Modernity, Crisis: German Free Lawyers, American Legal Realists, and the Transatlantic Turn to 'Life', 1903-1933', German Studies Review, 39 (1), February, 121-40[20]
- 11.Guillaume Sacriste and Antoine Vauchez (2007), 'The Force of International Law: Lawyers' Diplomacy on the International Scene in the 1920s', Law and Social Inquiry, 32 (1), 83-107[25]
- 12.Aniceto Masferrer (2009), 'Codification of Spanish Criminal Law in the Nineteenth Century: A Comparative Legal History Approach', Journal of Comparative Law, 4, 96-139[44]
- 13.Zhang Zhongqiu (2014), 'China's Selection of Foreign Laws for Succession in the Late Qing Dynasty', Rechtsgeschichte / Legal History, 22, 176-90[15]
- 14.Peter L. Lindseth (2015), 'Transatlantic Functionalism: New Deal Models and European Integration', Critical Analysis of Law, 2 (1), 83-105[23]
- 15.Ahmad Amara, 'Civilizational Exceptions: Ottoman Law and Governance in Late Ottoman Palestine', Law and History Review, 36 (4), 915-41[27]
- 16.Duncan Kennedy (2006), 'Three Globalizations of Law and Legal Thought: 1850-2000', in David Trubek and Alvaro Santos (eds), The New Law and Economic Development: A Critical Appraisal, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY, USA, 19-73[55]
- 17.Linda Colley (2014), 'Empires of Writing: Britain, America and Constitutions, 1776-1848', Law and History Review, 32 (2), 237-66[29]
- 18.Ahmad Bishara (2014), 'Paper Routes: Inscribing Islamic Law across the Nineteenth-Century Western Indian Ocean', Law and History Review, 32 (4), 797-820[17]
- 19.Richard P. Boast (2014), 'The Ideology of Tenurial Revolution: The Pacific Rim 1850-1950," law&history, 1 (1), 137-57[21]
- 20.Cheng-Yi Huang (2008), 'Enacting the Incomprehensible China: Modern European Jurisprudence and the Japanese Reconstruction of Qing Political Law', Law and Social Inquiry, 33 (4), 955-1001[47]
- 21.Christopher Tomlins (2001), 'The Legal Cartography of Colonization, the Legal Polyphony of Settlement: English Intrusions on the American Mainland in the Seventeenth Century', Law and Social Inquiry, 26 (2) 315-72[58]
- 22.Alan Lester and Fae Dussart (2008), 'Trajectories of Protection: Protectorates of Aborigines in Early Nineteenth Century Australia and Aotearoa New Zealand', New Zealand Geographer, 64, 205-20[16]
- 23.Geremy Forman (2009), 'A Tale of Two Regions: Diffusion of the Israeli 50 Percent Rule from the Galilee to the Occupied West Bank', Law and Social Inquiry, 34 (3), 671-711[41]
- 24.Kaius Tuori (2015), 'The Theory and Practice of Indigenous Dispossession in the Late Nineteenth Century: The Saami in the Far North of Europe and the Legal History of Colonialism', Comparative Legal History, 3 (1), 152-85[34]
- 25.Thomas Duve (2018), 'Legal Traditions: A Dialogue between Comparative Law and Comparative Legal History', Comparative Legal History, 6 (1), 15-33[19]
- 26.Catherine L. Evans (2018), 'Heart of Ice: Defendants and Colonial Law in the Canadian North-West', Law and History Review, 36 (2), May, 199-234[27]
- 27.Richard Ross (2008), 'Legal Communications and Imperial Governance: British North America and Spanish America Compared', in Michael Grossberg and Christopher Tomlins (eds), The Cambridge History of Law in America: Volume 1, Early America, 1580-1815, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press, 104-43[40].
- 28.Jo-Anne Claire Pemberton (2013), 'The So-Called Right of Civilisation in European Colonial Ideology, 16th to 20th Centuries', Journal of the History of International Law, 15, 25-52[28]
- 29.Sundhya Puja (2013), 'Laws of Encounter: A Jurisdictional Account of International Law', London Review of International Law, 1 (1), 63-98[36]
- 30.Jakob Zollman (2014), 'German Colonial Law and Comparative Law, 1884-1919', in Thomas Duve (ed.), Entanglements in Legal History: Conceptual Approaches, Frankfurt, Germany: Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, 253-94[42]
- 31.Binyamin Blum (2017), 'The Hounds of Empire: Forensic Dog Tracking in Britain and Its Colonies, 1888-1953', Law and History Review, 35 (3), 621-65[45].

