State law and legal positivism : the global rise of a new paradigm / / edited by Baudouin Dupret and Jean-Louis Halpérin
| State law and legal positivism : the global rise of a new paradigm / / edited by Baudouin Dupret and Jean-Louis Halpérin |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill Nijhoff, , [2022] |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 pages) |
| Disciplina | 340/.112 |
| Collana | Legal History Library |
| Soggetto topico |
Customary law - History
Law reform - History Legislation - History Rule of law - History |
| ISBN | 90-04-49871-0 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 The Great Divide in Legal Discourse: Towards a Global Historical Ontology of the Concept of Positive Law -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Historical Ontology of the Concept of Law -- 3 The Positivism of the Science of Law: A Paradigmatic Revolution -- 4 The Positivization of the Law: Global Positive Law and Its Local Variants -- 5 For a Historical and Pragmatic Ontology of Law -- References -- Chapter 2 Historical Landmarks in Mapping the Spread of Positive Law Teaching -- 1 How Should "Tradere jura positiva" Be Understood? -- 1.1 An Initial Definition of Legal Education: The Birth of Law Faculties -- 1.2 First Reforms to Promote the Teaching of Positive Law -- 2 Were There Two or Three European Models during the Nineteenth Century? -- 2.1 The French Model of National Programs -- 2.2 The German Model: Teaching Positive Law without a Fixed Program -- 2.3 Can One Speak of Law Faculties in England? -- 3 The Spread of the Law Faculty Model and Local Pragmatism in Extra-European Legal Education -- 3.1 The Diversity of American and Australian Legal Education Institutions -- 3.2 The Adaptation of the Faculty Model in Asia and Africa -- 3.3 Movement of Professors and the Pervasiveness of Western Models outside Europe -- References -- Chapter 3 Writing Customs: Three Episodes in the Process of Positivization of Berber Customary Law in Morocco -- 1 Writing as a Legal Technique -- 2 Inscribing Customs in the Pluralist Legal System of the Protectorate -- 3 Prelude: An Islamic Textual Model to Write Customs at the Dawn of Modernity -- 4 Interlude: Independence, Legal Unification and the Obliteration of Customary Law -- 5 Post-Colonial Rewritings and Recyclings of Customary Law -- 6 Conclusions: Positivizing Customs through Writing.
References -- Chapter 4 Ambiguities and Interdependencies: The Relationship between Legal Positivization and Islamic Law in Colonial India, 1765-1909 -- 1 Ideological Foundations of Anglo-Indian Utilitarian and Contractual Positivisms -- 2 Utilitarian Positivism and the Foundation of a Legal Order through Law: The Need to Recognize the Indo-Islamic Order to Better Succeed It -- 3 A Far-from-Homogenous Positivization of Indian Law and the Progressive Predominance of Its Contractualist Side -- 4 The Implementation of Contractualist Positivization, or How to Delay the Inevitable Recognition of the Indian as a Subject in Law -- 5 TheUseful Reintegration of Islamic Law into the Indian Legal Order -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5 The Positivization of Ottoman Law and the Question of Continuity -- 1 Epochal Thresholds or Epochal Fallacies: The Turtles Debate -- 2 A Comment on Legalism-as-Culture -- 3 New Meanings of Old Terms: Nizam, Kanun, Hukuk -- 4 Discontinuities and Continuities in Judicial Practice -- 4.1 Functions and Structure of the Courts -- 4.2 Normative Law -- 4.3 Styles of Dispute Resolution and Adjudication -- 5 The Discourse of Law -- 5.1 Legislation -- 5.2 Pre-Trial Processes -- 5.3 Trial Processes -- 5.4 Recording of Judgments -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6 How Government Jurists and Lawyering Approached the "Positivizing" of the Law in China -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Approach of Government Jurists and Lawyering -- 3 China's Predecessor -- 3.1 Conventional Narrative: What Was Missing? -- 3.2 Japan's Institutional Design -- 4 China, from the Qing to the Guomindang -- 4.1 China's First Solution -- 4.2 China's Second Solution -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7 The Meiji Era: When Japanese Law Became Positivized -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Departure from Old Japanese Law -- 2.1 The Fall of the Old Regime. 2.1.1 The Edo System -- 2.1.2 The Breaking Point: Unequal Treaties -- 2.2 The Elimination of the Chinese Model -- 2.2.1 The Abolition of the Old Regime -- 2.2.2 The Attempt to Reformulate the Old Law: A Return to the Classics -- 3 Changing to Legal Positivism -- 3.1 Acquiring Legal Knowledge -- 3.1.1 Journeys of Discovery -- 3.1.2 Foreign Advisors -- 3.1.3 The Appropriation of New Legal Knowledge -- 3.2 The Positivization of Law and New Institutional and Social Patterns -- 3.2.1 Establishing a Collective, Centralized and Unified State -- 3.2.2 New Civil and Judicial Structures -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Conclusion -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910795554003321 |
| Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill Nijhoff, , [2022] | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
State law and legal positivism : the global rise of a new paradigm / / edited by Baudouin Dupret and Jean-Louis Halpérin
| State law and legal positivism : the global rise of a new paradigm / / edited by Baudouin Dupret and Jean-Louis Halpérin |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill Nijhoff, , [2022] |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (275 pages) |
| Disciplina | 340/.112 |
| Collana | Legal History Library |
| Soggetto topico |
Customary law - History
Law reform - History Legislation - History Rule of law - History |
| ISBN | 90-04-49871-0 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Half Title -- Series Information -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- Chapter 1 The Great Divide in Legal Discourse: Towards a Global Historical Ontology of the Concept of Positive Law -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Historical Ontology of the Concept of Law -- 3 The Positivism of the Science of Law: A Paradigmatic Revolution -- 4 The Positivization of the Law: Global Positive Law and Its Local Variants -- 5 For a Historical and Pragmatic Ontology of Law -- References -- Chapter 2 Historical Landmarks in Mapping the Spread of Positive Law Teaching -- 1 How Should "Tradere jura positiva" Be Understood? -- 1.1 An Initial Definition of Legal Education: The Birth of Law Faculties -- 1.2 First Reforms to Promote the Teaching of Positive Law -- 2 Were There Two or Three European Models during the Nineteenth Century? -- 2.1 The French Model of National Programs -- 2.2 The German Model: Teaching Positive Law without a Fixed Program -- 2.3 Can One Speak of Law Faculties in England? -- 3 The Spread of the Law Faculty Model and Local Pragmatism in Extra-European Legal Education -- 3.1 The Diversity of American and Australian Legal Education Institutions -- 3.2 The Adaptation of the Faculty Model in Asia and Africa -- 3.3 Movement of Professors and the Pervasiveness of Western Models outside Europe -- References -- Chapter 3 Writing Customs: Three Episodes in the Process of Positivization of Berber Customary Law in Morocco -- 1 Writing as a Legal Technique -- 2 Inscribing Customs in the Pluralist Legal System of the Protectorate -- 3 Prelude: An Islamic Textual Model to Write Customs at the Dawn of Modernity -- 4 Interlude: Independence, Legal Unification and the Obliteration of Customary Law -- 5 Post-Colonial Rewritings and Recyclings of Customary Law -- 6 Conclusions: Positivizing Customs through Writing.
References -- Chapter 4 Ambiguities and Interdependencies: The Relationship between Legal Positivization and Islamic Law in Colonial India, 1765-1909 -- 1 Ideological Foundations of Anglo-Indian Utilitarian and Contractual Positivisms -- 2 Utilitarian Positivism and the Foundation of a Legal Order through Law: The Need to Recognize the Indo-Islamic Order to Better Succeed It -- 3 A Far-from-Homogenous Positivization of Indian Law and the Progressive Predominance of Its Contractualist Side -- 4 The Implementation of Contractualist Positivization, or How to Delay the Inevitable Recognition of the Indian as a Subject in Law -- 5 TheUseful Reintegration of Islamic Law into the Indian Legal Order -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 5 The Positivization of Ottoman Law and the Question of Continuity -- 1 Epochal Thresholds or Epochal Fallacies: The Turtles Debate -- 2 A Comment on Legalism-as-Culture -- 3 New Meanings of Old Terms: Nizam, Kanun, Hukuk -- 4 Discontinuities and Continuities in Judicial Practice -- 4.1 Functions and Structure of the Courts -- 4.2 Normative Law -- 4.3 Styles of Dispute Resolution and Adjudication -- 5 The Discourse of Law -- 5.1 Legislation -- 5.2 Pre-Trial Processes -- 5.3 Trial Processes -- 5.4 Recording of Judgments -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6 How Government Jurists and Lawyering Approached the "Positivizing" of the Law in China -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Approach of Government Jurists and Lawyering -- 3 China's Predecessor -- 3.1 Conventional Narrative: What Was Missing? -- 3.2 Japan's Institutional Design -- 4 China, from the Qing to the Guomindang -- 4.1 China's First Solution -- 4.2 China's Second Solution -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7 The Meiji Era: When Japanese Law Became Positivized -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Departure from Old Japanese Law -- 2.1 The Fall of the Old Regime. 2.1.1 The Edo System -- 2.1.2 The Breaking Point: Unequal Treaties -- 2.2 The Elimination of the Chinese Model -- 2.2.1 The Abolition of the Old Regime -- 2.2.2 The Attempt to Reformulate the Old Law: A Return to the Classics -- 3 Changing to Legal Positivism -- 3.1 Acquiring Legal Knowledge -- 3.1.1 Journeys of Discovery -- 3.1.2 Foreign Advisors -- 3.1.3 The Appropriation of New Legal Knowledge -- 3.2 The Positivization of Law and New Institutional and Social Patterns -- 3.2.1 Establishing a Collective, Centralized and Unified State -- 3.2.2 New Civil and Judicial Structures -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Conclusion -- Index. |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910821548403321 |
| Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill Nijhoff, , [2022] | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||