Charting the Divide Between Common and Civil Law

Author:   Thomas Lundmark (Chair of Common Law and Comparative Legal Theory, Chair of Common Law and Comparative Legal Theory, University of Munster, Germany)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780199738823


Pages:   496
Publication Date:   27 September 2012
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Charting the Divide Between Common and Civil Law


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Author:   Thomas Lundmark (Chair of Common Law and Comparative Legal Theory, Chair of Common Law and Comparative Legal Theory, University of Munster, Germany)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 16.30cm
Weight:   0.814kg
ISBN:  

9780199738823


ISBN 10:   0199738823
Pages:   496
Publication Date:   27 September 2012
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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 Contents

INTRODUCTION CHAPTER ONE: The Discipline of Comparative Law CHAPTER TWO: Comparative Legal Linguistics CHAPTER THREE: Comparative Jurisprudence CHAPTER FOUR: Lawyers CHAPTER FIVE: Judges and Judiciaries CHAPTER SIX: Lay Judges and Juries CHAPTER SEVEN: Legal Reasoning CHAPTER EIGHT: Statutes and their Construction CHAPTER NINE: Judicial Precedents CONCLUSION

Reviews

Thomas Lundmark rightly challenges taxonomic and static appreciation of 'legal families' in the world and does so in the most effective manner, through detailed and informed appreciation of the institutions of specific jurisdictions. England, Sweden, Germany and the U.S.A. are here dynamically compared with one another in terms of prevailing legal philosophy, legal linguistics, legal actors and legal methods. The treatment is erudite and cosmopolitan, the conclusions irresistible. It is a splendid book. --H. Patrick Glenn, Peter M. Laing Professor of Law, McGill University In Charting the Divide Between Common and Civil Law, Thomas Lundmark explains what makes legal systems unique and questions the value of the conventional distinction between 'civil law' and 'common law' systems. He illustrates this through an impressive survey of scholarship, particularly on Germany and the USA, as well as England and Wales and Sweden. He offers a sophisticated picture of legal reasoning that includes the structure of language and jurisprudential traditions, professions, and the interpretation of statutes and precedents. He demonstrates convincingly that such a picture reveals the individuality of legal systems and the need to avoid traditional stereotypes in the classification of legal families. --John Bell, Professor of Law, Faculty of Law, University of Cambridge, UK This book is different! It is not about comparison at the level of specific doctrines of private law such as contract or tort law. Instead, it reaches out to the structural level and touches the very core of the different approaches that we can discern between Common Law and Civil Law. Lundmark's book offers new and fascinating deeper insights even to a reader who has been engaged in comparative law from an academic as well as from a practical aspect for decades. --Professor Dr. Ingeborg Schwenzer, LL.M., Basel/Switzerland


<br> Thomas Lundmark rightly challenges taxonomic and static appreciation of 'legal families' in the world and does so in the most effective manner, through detailed and informed appreciation of the institutions of specific jurisdictions. England, Sweden, Germany and the U.S.A. are here dynamically compared with one another in terms of prevailing legal philosophy, legal linguistics, legal actors and legal methods. The treatment is erudite and cosmopolitan, the conclusions irresistible. It is a splendid book. <br>--H. Patrick Glenn, Peter M. Laing Professor of Law, McGill University <br><p><br>


Author Information

Thomas Lundmark is Chair of Common Law and Comparative Legal Theory at the University of Münster, where he lectures on comparative law, jurisprudence, and legal methodology. He studied comparative literature in Uppsala and San Diego before embarking upon the study of law in Berkeley, Freiburg (Fulbright Scholar), and Bonn (Dr jur). After working as a lawyer in California, he served three consecutive years as a Fulbright Senior Professor in Bonn and Rostock. Professor Lundmark has published and lectured widely in German and English.

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