Vandeplas Publishing
Comparative Law: 3rd. Edition
Comparative Law: 3rd. Edition
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Chapter one serves as both introduction and conclusions.
The conclusions are:
1) Governments and rulers are not much interested in developing law, especially not private law, but leave this to others to whom they do not grant power to make law;
2) Even famous lawmakers are seldom interested in a particular social issue in law or in giving law certainty;
3) Borrowing, even mindless, is the name of the legal game.
Chapters range from grand legislation (the Ten Commandments and Napoleon's code civil) to unrecognized law in action and daily life (Jesus and the Samaritan woman, Jesus and the adulteress, the claim that Julius Caesar descended from a slave). Other chapters deal with judges' passivity in giving needlessly a judgment they claimed was unjust, to deciding against the judge's own theoretical and practical position (Somerset's Case).
Likewise stressed is the difficulty of developing law fit for the society, and of understanding foreign legal thinking. The survival of law in different circumstances for centuries and also in a different place is emphasized.
The chapters are separate entities, and the author claims that each must stand on its own merits, but he insists that if each is plausible, then together they present a very different approach to law in society from those habitually offered.
About the author:
Alan Watson, Professor of Law at the University of Georgia School of Law, is regarded as one of the world's foremost authorities on Roman law, comparative law, legal history, and law and religion.
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