Legitimacy, Legal Development and Change
Legitimacy, Legal Development and Change
Law and Modernization Reconsidered
Taylor & Francis Ltd
06/2012
474
Dura
Inglês
9780754677284
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Contents: Introduction to legal development and change, David K Linnan; Part I Changing the ROL Narrative: The new, new legal development model, David K. Linnan; Rethinking the rule of law as antidote to African development challenges, Joseph M. Isanga; The color of Thailand's (un)constitutional reforms: red, yellow or orange?, Andrew Harding and Peter Leyland; Debtor and creditor learning: changes over time in Indonesian bankruptcy reorganization approaches, Darminto Hartono; China's economic legal system in changing times, Liu Dongjin. Part II Religious Law as Religious and Social Form: Economy and society: a Qur'anic perspective, Tarak Abdallah; Rules and behaviour in judging Shari'ah: a woman's perspective, Lily Zakiyah Munir; Jewish law reform in 19th-century Europe, Peter J. Haas. Part III Shari'ah, Customary and Secular National Laws' Interplay in the World's Most Populous Islamic Country: Islam and constitutionalism in Indonesia, Robin Bush; From both sides now: Shari'ah morality, 'pornography' and women in Indonesia, Julia Suryakusuma; Legal pluralism and the three-cornered case study of women's inheritance rights changing in Lombok, Erman Rajagukguk. Part IV Japan's Once and Future Legal Modernization Narrative: Japan's legal technical assistance efforts: a different modernization narrative?, Veronica L. Taylor; Japan: a society of rights?, John O. Haley; Lessons from history: Japan's new quasi-jury system (saiban-in seido) and the Jury Act of 1923, Kent Anderson and Peter Kirby. Part V Latin America, Post Conflict and the Juduciary: Institutional factors determining the gap between Laws in the Books vs Laws in Action: an analytical framework for improving judicial effectiveness, Edgardo Buscaglia; Politicization of the Latin American judiciary via informal connections, Raul A. Sanchez Urribarri; Criminal law reform after dictatorship: Chile's struggle to balance rights with citizens' desire for law and order, Lydia Brashear Tiede. Part VI Russia and the State: a Window on Modernization: Modernization and legal reform: the dilemma of the state in Russia, Gordon B. Smith; Can weak states have strong courts? Evidence from post-Communist Russia, Alexei Trochev; The challenges to deregulating Russia: business registration policy and practice under Putin, Eugene Huskey; Dancing the rumba: federalism reform in Russia under Putin and Medvedev, Joel H. Samuels. Part VII International Law as Legal Development Subject: Rebuilding the Tower of Babel - the European Court of Human Rights and the diversity of legal cultures, Angelika Nussberger; International legal development and national legal change in the fight against corruption, Michael Kubiciel; Shifting the paradigm of international environmental law: the precautionary principle from a developing country perspective, Marsudi Triatmodjo; Index.
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Contents: Introduction to legal development and change, David K Linnan; Part I Changing the ROL Narrative: The new, new legal development model, David K. Linnan; Rethinking the rule of law as antidote to African development challenges, Joseph M. Isanga; The color of Thailand's (un)constitutional reforms: red, yellow or orange?, Andrew Harding and Peter Leyland; Debtor and creditor learning: changes over time in Indonesian bankruptcy reorganization approaches, Darminto Hartono; China's economic legal system in changing times, Liu Dongjin. Part II Religious Law as Religious and Social Form: Economy and society: a Qur'anic perspective, Tarak Abdallah; Rules and behaviour in judging Shari'ah: a woman's perspective, Lily Zakiyah Munir; Jewish law reform in 19th-century Europe, Peter J. Haas. Part III Shari'ah, Customary and Secular National Laws' Interplay in the World's Most Populous Islamic Country: Islam and constitutionalism in Indonesia, Robin Bush; From both sides now: Shari'ah morality, 'pornography' and women in Indonesia, Julia Suryakusuma; Legal pluralism and the three-cornered case study of women's inheritance rights changing in Lombok, Erman Rajagukguk. Part IV Japan's Once and Future Legal Modernization Narrative: Japan's legal technical assistance efforts: a different modernization narrative?, Veronica L. Taylor; Japan: a society of rights?, John O. Haley; Lessons from history: Japan's new quasi-jury system (saiban-in seido) and the Jury Act of 1923, Kent Anderson and Peter Kirby. Part V Latin America, Post Conflict and the Juduciary: Institutional factors determining the gap between Laws in the Books vs Laws in Action: an analytical framework for improving judicial effectiveness, Edgardo Buscaglia; Politicization of the Latin American judiciary via informal connections, Raul A. Sanchez Urribarri; Criminal law reform after dictatorship: Chile's struggle to balance rights with citizens' desire for law and order, Lydia Brashear Tiede. Part VI Russia and the State: a Window on Modernization: Modernization and legal reform: the dilemma of the state in Russia, Gordon B. Smith; Can weak states have strong courts? Evidence from post-Communist Russia, Alexei Trochev; The challenges to deregulating Russia: business registration policy and practice under Putin, Eugene Huskey; Dancing the rumba: federalism reform in Russia under Putin and Medvedev, Joel H. Samuels. Part VII International Law as Legal Development Subject: Rebuilding the Tower of Babel - the European Court of Human Rights and the diversity of legal cultures, Angelika Nussberger; International legal development and national legal change in the fight against corruption, Michael Kubiciel; Shifting the paradigm of international environmental law: the precautionary principle from a developing country perspective, Marsudi Triatmodjo; Index.
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