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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jaakko HusaPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd ISBN: 9781788974158ISBN 10: 1788974158 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 30 November 2018 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: Preface PART I FOUNDATIONS 1. Defining law and globalisation 2. Globalisations in time PART II LEGAL GLOBALISATIONS 3. Comparative law and global law 4. Globalising legalities PART III THEORY AND METHODOLOGY 5. Theorising globally 6. Methodological views PART IV EDUCATION AND LANGUAGE 7. Educating lawyers 8. Language of law and legal globalisation 9. Conclusion IndexReviews`Professor Husa's advanced introduction to globalisation and law is a timely and much needed work that examines the topic, not in some textbook defined way, but in terms of the tensions and debates that this complex and controversial subject generates. The author begins by showing that historically law has always had a global dimension (ius gentium, ius commune, ius naturale, colonialization, human rights etc) and he goes on to consider the difficulties that globalisation presents to comparative lawyers. Professor Husa guides the reader effortlessly through these difficulties and advances his own important argument that comparative law will have to move away from its traditional nation state bound view of law. He pursues this argument in examining the more precise aspects of the global debate - neoliberalism, constitutionalism, human rights, lex mercatoria and judicial internationalisation - before posing this question. What kind of theoretical and methodological base is required when thinking about law in a global context? Traditional theory and methods are tested within the globalisation paradigm and the author concludes by stressing the importance of legal pluralism within a culturally diverse world. How should all of this impact on legal education and in turn on legal language? What Professor Husa provides is a very informative and clear analysis - introductory but equally profoundly wide-ranging in its research base - of these two issues. Legal globalisation? Here in this book are all the arguments, debates, tensions and of course some answers.' -- Geoffrey Samuel, Kent Law School, UK `This timely book provides a perfect introduction to the multifaceted and ambivalent discussion about law and globalisation. Written by an authority in the field, this book is not only a concise and highly readable introduction for newcomers to the field, but also provides a well-informed and innovative critique of the foundations and consequences of globalisation of law. Highly recommended!' -- Jan Smits, Maastricht University, the Netherlands `Professor Husa's advanced introduction to globalisation and law is a timely and much needed work that examines the topic, not in some textbook defined way, but in terms of the tensions and debates that this complex and controversial subject generates. The author begins by showing that historically law has always had a global dimension (ius gentium, ius commune, ius naturale, colonialization, human rights etc) and he goes on to consider the difficulties that globalisation presents to comparative lawyers. Professor Husa guides the reader effortlessly through these difficulties and advances his own important argument that comparative law will have to move away from its traditional nation state bound view of law. He pursues this argument in examining the more precise aspects of the global debate - neoliberalism, constitutionalism, human rights, lex mercatoria and judicial internationalisation - before posing this question. What kind of theoretical and methodological base is required when thinking about law in a global context? Traditional theory and methods are tested within the globalisation paradigm and the author concludes by stressing the importance of legal pluralism within a culturally diverse world. How should all of this impact on legal education and in turn on legal language? What Professor Husa provides is a very informative and clear analysis - introductory but equally profoundly wide-ranging in its research base - of these two issues. Legal globalisation? Here in this book are all the arguments, debates, tensions and of course some answers.' -- Geoffrey Samuel, Kent Law School, UK `The field of law and globalisation is increasingly important, but also increasingly difficult to navigate, because it encompasses an expanding range of concepts, perspectives, and phenomena - global law, global governance, transnational law, comparative law, legal pluralism, universalism, and so on - that scholars rarely take the time to distinguish or define. Professor Husa has done students and scholars alike a great service by writing a fair-minded and broad-ranging introduction to the subject that cuts through this thicket in clear and concise fashion.' -- David S. Law, Washington University in St. Louis, US and The University of Hong Kong `This timely book provides a perfect introduction to the multifaceted and ambivalent discussion about law and globalisation. Written by an authority in the field, this book is not only a concise and highly readable introduction for newcomers to the field, but also provides a well-informed and innovative critique of the foundations and consequences of globalisation of law. Highly recommended!' -- Jan Smits, Maastricht University, the Netherlands `Professor Husa's advanced introduction to globalisation and law is a timely and much needed work that examines the topic, not in some textbook defined way, but in terms of the tensions and debates that this complex and controversial subject generates. The author begins by showing that historically law has always had a global dimension (ius gentium, ius commune, ius naturale, colonialization, human rights etc) and he goes on to consider the difficulties that globalisation presents to comparative lawyers. Professor Husa guides the reader effortlessly through these difficulties and advances his own important argument that comparative law will have to move away from its traditional nation state bound view of law. He pursues this argument in examining the more precise aspects of the global debate - neoliberalism, constitutionalism, human rights, lex mercatoria and judicial internationalisation - before posing this question. What kind of theoretical and methodological base is required when thinking about law in a global context? Traditional theory and methods are tested within the globalisation paradigm and the author concludes by stressing the importance of legal pluralism within a culturally diverse world. How should all of this impact on legal education and in turn on legal language? What Professor Husa provides is a very informative and clear analysis - introductory but equally profoundly wide-ranging in its research base - of these two issues. Legal globalisation? Here in this book are all the arguments, debates, tensions and of course some answers.' -- Geoffrey Samuel, Kent Law School, UK Author InformationJaakko Husa, Professor in Law and Globalisation, Faculty of Law, University of Helsinki, Finland Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |