Empire of Law

Empire of Law
Author: Kaius Tuori
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2020-04-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781108483636

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The history of exiles from Nazi Germany and the creation of the notion of a shared European legal tradition.

Law s Empire

Law s Empire
Author: Ronald Dworkin
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2011-11
Genre: Law
ISBN: 8175342560

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In 'Law's Empire', Ronald Dworkin relects on the nature of the law, its authority, its application in democracy, the prominent role of interpretation in judgement and the relations of lawmakers and lawgivers in the community.

Empire Emergency and International Law

Empire  Emergency and International Law
Author: John Reynolds
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 343
Release: 2017-08-10
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781107172517

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This book analyses the states of emergency exposing the intersections between colonial law, international law, imperialism and racial discrimination.

Empire of Law and Indian Justice in Colonial Mexico

Empire of Law and Indian Justice in Colonial Mexico
Author: Brian Philip Owensby
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 393
Release: 2008
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780804758635

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Brian P. Owensby is Associate Professor in the University of Virginia's Corcoran Department of History. He is the author of Intimate Ironies: Modernity and the Making of Middle-Class Lives in Brazil (Stanford, 1999).

Law Language and Empire in the Roman Tradition

Law  Language  and Empire in the Roman Tradition
Author: Clifford Ando
Publsiher: University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages: 182
Release: 2011-09-14
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780812204889

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The Romans depicted the civil law as a body of rules crafted through communal deliberation for the purpose of self-government. Yet, as Clifford Ando demonstrates in Law, Language, and Empire in the Roman Tradition, the civil law was also an instrument of empire: many of its most characteristic features developed in response to the challenges posed when the legal system of Rome was deployed to embrace, incorporate, and govern people and cultures far afield. Ando studies the processes through which lawyers at Rome grappled with the legal pluralism resulting from imperial conquests. He focuses primarily on the tools—most prominently analogy and fiction—used to extend the system and enable it to regulate the lives of persons far from the minds of the original legislators, and he traces the central place that philosophy of language came to occupy in Roman legal thought. In the second part of the book Ando examines the relationship between civil, public, and international law. Despite the prominence accorded public and international law in legal theory, it was civil law that provided conceptual resources to those other fields in the Roman tradition. Ultimately it was the civil law's implication in systems of domination outside its own narrow sphere that opened the door to its own subversion. When political turmoil at Rome upended the institutions of political and legislative authority and effectively ended Roman democracy, the concepts and language that the civil law supplied to the project of Republican empire saw their meanings transformed. As a result, forms of domination once exercised by Romans over others were inscribed in the workings of law at Rome, henceforth to be exercised by the Romans over themselves.

Law and Empire

Law and Empire
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2013-08-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9789004249516

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Law and Empire provides a comparative view of legal practices in Asia and Europe, from Antiquity to the eighteenth century. It relates the main principles of legal thinking in Chinese, Islamic, and European contexts to practices of lawmaking and adjudication. In particular, it shows how legal procedure and legal thinking could be used in strikingly different ways. Rulers could use law effectively as an instrument of domination; legal specialists built their identity, livelihood and social status on their knowledge of law; and non-elites exploited the range of legal fora available to them. This volume shows the relevance of legal pluralism and the social relevance of litigation for premodern power structures.

Law and Empire in Late Antiquity

Law and Empire in Late Antiquity
Author: Jill Harries
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 250
Release: 2001-10-11
Genre: History
ISBN: 0521422736

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This is the first systematic treatment in English by an historian of the nature, aims and efficacy of public law in late imperial Roman society from the third to the fifth century AD. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach, and using the writings of lawyers and legal anthropologists, as well as those of historians, the book offers new interpretations of central questions: What was the law of late antiquity? How efficacious was late Roman law? What were contemporary attitudes to pain, and the function of punishment? Was the judicial system corrupt? How were disputes settled? Law is analysed as an evolving discipline, within a framework of principles by which even the emperor was bound. While law, through its language, was an expression of imperial power, it was also a means of communication between emperor and subject, and was used by citizens, poor as well as rich, to serve their own ends.

Rage for Order

Rage for Order
Author: Lauren Benton,Lisa Ford
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2016-10-03
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780674972803

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Lauren Benton and Lisa Ford find the origins of international law in empires, especially in the British Empire’s sprawling efforts to refashion the imperial constitution and reorder the world. These attempts touched on all the issues of the early nineteenth century, from slavery to revolution, and changed the way we think about the empire’s legacy.