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Table of Contents
Contents: List of contributors
Acknowledgments
Part I: Theory and Methods
1. What is comparative legal history? Legal historiography and the revolt against formalism, 1930-60 / Adolfo Giuliani
2. Comparative? Legal? History? Crossing Boundaries / Sean Donlan
3. Methodological perspectives in comparative legal history: an analytical approach / Dag Michalsen
4. Comparative legal history: methodology for morphology / Matthew Dyson
Part II: Legal sources
5. Here, there, everywhere or ... nowhere? Some comparative and historical afterthoughts about custom as a source of law / Jacques Vanderlinden
6. Convergence and the colonization of custom in pre-modern Europe / Emily Kadens
7. Custom as a source of law in European and East Asian legal history / Marie Seong-Hak Kim
8. The ius commune as the 'ratio scripta' in the civil law tradition: a comparative approach to the Spanish case / Aniceto Masferrer and Juan A. Obarrio
9. Legal education in England and continental Europe between the middle ages and the early-modern period: a comparison / Dolores Freda
Part III: Legal institutions
10. The triumph of judicial review: the evolution of post-revolutionary legal thought / Jean-Louis Halperin
11. Killing the vampire of human culture: Slavery as a problem in international law / Paul Finkelman and Seymour Drescher
12. Continental European superior courts and procedure in civil actions (11th-19th centuries) / CH (Remco) van Rhee
13. The genesis of concepts of possession and ownership in the civilian tradition and at common law: how did the common law manage without a concept of ownership? Why the Roman law did not? / Anna Taitslin
14. The common law and the Code civil: the curious case of the law of contract / Warren Swain
15. When the wind turned from South to West: the transition of Scandinavian legal cultures 1945-2000, a comparative sketch / Kjell Å Modéer
Part IV: Codification
16. Unification and codification in today's European private law and nineteenth-century Germany: the challenges and opportunities of comparing historical and ongoing events / Dirk Heirbaut
17. Owning the conceptualization of ownership in American civil law jurisdictions and the origins of nineteenth-century code provisions / Agustín Parise
18. Why was private law not codified in Sweden and Finland? / Heikki Pihlajamäki
Index.
Acknowledgments
Part I: Theory and Methods
1. What is comparative legal history? Legal historiography and the revolt against formalism, 1930-60 / Adolfo Giuliani
2. Comparative? Legal? History? Crossing Boundaries / Sean Donlan
3. Methodological perspectives in comparative legal history: an analytical approach / Dag Michalsen
4. Comparative legal history: methodology for morphology / Matthew Dyson
Part II: Legal sources
5. Here, there, everywhere or ... nowhere? Some comparative and historical afterthoughts about custom as a source of law / Jacques Vanderlinden
6. Convergence and the colonization of custom in pre-modern Europe / Emily Kadens
7. Custom as a source of law in European and East Asian legal history / Marie Seong-Hak Kim
8. The ius commune as the 'ratio scripta' in the civil law tradition: a comparative approach to the Spanish case / Aniceto Masferrer and Juan A. Obarrio
9. Legal education in England and continental Europe between the middle ages and the early-modern period: a comparison / Dolores Freda
Part III: Legal institutions
10. The triumph of judicial review: the evolution of post-revolutionary legal thought / Jean-Louis Halperin
11. Killing the vampire of human culture: Slavery as a problem in international law / Paul Finkelman and Seymour Drescher
12. Continental European superior courts and procedure in civil actions (11th-19th centuries) / CH (Remco) van Rhee
13. The genesis of concepts of possession and ownership in the civilian tradition and at common law: how did the common law manage without a concept of ownership? Why the Roman law did not? / Anna Taitslin
14. The common law and the Code civil: the curious case of the law of contract / Warren Swain
15. When the wind turned from South to West: the transition of Scandinavian legal cultures 1945-2000, a comparative sketch / Kjell Å Modéer
Part IV: Codification
16. Unification and codification in today's European private law and nineteenth-century Germany: the challenges and opportunities of comparing historical and ongoing events / Dirk Heirbaut
17. Owning the conceptualization of ownership in American civil law jurisdictions and the origins of nineteenth-century code provisions / Agustín Parise
18. Why was private law not codified in Sweden and Finland? / Heikki Pihlajamäki
Index.