Law’s Political Foundations: Rivers, Rifles, Rice, and Religion

Author:   John O. Haley
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
ISBN:  

9781785368493


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   24 June 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Law’s Political Foundations: Rivers, Rifles, Rice, and Religion


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Full Product Details

Author:   John O. Haley
Publisher:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Imprint:   Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
ISBN:  

9781785368493


ISBN 10:   1785368494
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   24 June 2016
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

Contents: Introduction 1. Defining Law's Political Foundations 2. Rivers, Rifles, Rice, and Religion: Paradigms and Trajectories of Legal Change 3. Rivers, Rifles and Rice: Foundations of Public Law and Private Ordering in China 4. Rice and Rifles: Foundations of Private Law and Private Ordering in Japan 5. Rivers, Rifles, and Religion: The Primacy of Private Law in Western Europe 6. Rifles and Religion: The Transformation and Transplantation of Western Law in Hispanic America Epilogue: Beyond Magellan's World Index

Reviews

With magnificent scope, Law's Political Foundations leads the reader through government structure, political regimes, and law throughout the world. Haley's work deftly explains why China, Japan, Europe, and Latin America developed different forms of public and private legal regimes. Geography, war, agriculture, and belief shaped government and law; this novel framework permits Haley boldly to straddle empires and centuries in this captivating study of legal development. --M.C. Mirow, University of Edinburgh Law School, UK, and Florida International University College of LawIn Law's Political Foundations, John Haley brings a lifetime of thinking about the deep issues of comparative law to this fascinating exploration of the geographical roots, as well as the implications, of the very different regimes of public law, private law, and private ordering that respectively dominated the civilizations of China, Western Europe, and Japan. And although the West still speaks the language of private law, he argues, it is the public law paradigm first perfected in China that is becoming dominant in the modern state. There is much food for thought in this stimulating and provocative book. --Donald C. Clarke, The George Washington University In this breathtaking account, John Haley gives us a magisterial tour de force. He asks questions of astonishing breadth: when do societies rely on public law regimes, and when on private law regimes? He explores these universal puzzles with a relentless focus on the particular. In exquisite detail, he traces the way legal regimes developed historically across a wide range of countries. And he ties the developments to changes in religion, in economic production, in military extraction, and in transportation and communication facilities. Old questions, new answers - at root, Haley concludes: ''legal institutions develop in conjunction with the capacity of rulers to appropriate wealth and acquire revenue and the demands or needs they confront for the allocation of the material resources they control.'' Haley masterfully traces the interplay of rules, norms, laws, religious injunctions, and the demands of economic production and military extraction. --Mark Ramseyer, Harvard Law School


'With magnificent scope, Law's Political Foundations leads the reader through government structure, political regimes, and law throughout the world. Haley's work deftly explains why China, Japan, Europe, and Latin America developed different forms of public and private legal regimes. Geography, war, agriculture, and belief shaped government and law; this novel framework permits Haley boldly to straddle empires and centuries in this captivating study of legal development.' -- M.C. Mirow, University of Edinburgh Law School, UK, and Florida International University College of Law, US 'In Law's Political Foundations, John Haley brings a lifetime of thinking about the deep issues of comparative law to this fascinating exploration of the geographical roots, as well as the implications, of the very different regimes of public law, private law, and private ordering that respectively dominated the civilizations of China, Western Europe, and Japan. And although the West still speaks the language of private law, he argues, it is the public law paradigm first perfected in China that is becoming dominant in the modern state. There is much food for thought in this stimulating and provocative book.' -- Donald C. Clarke, The George Washington University, US 'In this breathtaking account, John Haley gives us a magisterial tour de force. He asks questions of astonishing breadth: when do societies rely on public law regimes, and when on private law regimes? He explores these universal puzzles with a relentless focus on the particular. In exquisite detail, he traces the way legal regimes developed historically across a wide range of countries. And he ties the developments to changes in religion, in economic production, in military extraction, and in transportation and communication facilities. Old questions, new answers - at root, Haley concludes: legal institutions develop in conjunction with the capacity of rulers to appropriate wealth and acquire revenue and the demands or needs they confront for the allocation of the material resources they control. Haley masterfully traces the interplay of rules, norms, laws, religious injunctions, and the demands of economic production and military extraction.' -- Mark Ramseyer, Harvard Law School, US


'With magnificent scope, Law's Political Foundations leads the reader through government structure, political regimes, and law throughout the world. Haley's work deftly explains why China, Japan, Europe, and Latin America developed different forms of public and private legal regimes. Geography, war, agriculture, and belief shaped government and law; this novel framework permits Haley boldly to straddle empires and centuries in this captivating study of legal development.' -- M.C. Mirow, University of Edinburgh Law School, UK, and Florida International University College of Law, US 'In Law's Political Foundations, John Haley brings a lifetime of thinking about the deep issues of comparative law to this fascinating exploration of the geographical roots, as well as the implications, of the very different regimes of public law, private law, and private ordering that respectively dominated the civilizations of China, Western Europe, and Japan. And although the West still speaks the language of private law, he argues, it is the public law paradigm first perfected in China that is becoming dominant in the modern state. There is much food for thought in this stimulating and provocative book.' -- Donald C. Clarke, The George Washington University, US 'In this breathtaking account, John Haley gives us a magisterial tour de force. He asks questions of astonishing breadth: when do societies rely on public law regimes, and when on private law regimes? He explores these universal puzzles with a relentless focus on the particular. In exquisite detail, he traces the way legal regimes developed historically across a wide range of countries. And he ties the developments to changes in religion, in economic production, in military extraction, and in transportation and communication facilities. Old questions, new answers - at root, Haley concludes: legal institutions develop in conjunction with the capacity of rulers to appropriate wealth and acquire revenue and the demands or needs they confront for the allocation of the material resources they control. Haley masterfully traces the interplay of rules, norms, laws, religious injunctions, and the demands of economic production and military extraction.' -- Mark Ramseyer, Harvard Law School, US


Author Information

John O. Haley, William R. Orthwein Distinguished Professor of Law Emeritus, Washington University in St. Louis, US

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