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Explore the top 10 recommended comparative law books for law students
Explore the top 10 recommended comparative law books for law students and find the perfect one that can elevate your understanding and expertise. Take advantage of the opportunity to enhance your legal knowledge! Zweigert, K. and Kotz, H., An Introduction to Comparative Law (Oxford University Press, 2011) ISBN-10: 0198268599; ISBN-13: 978-0198268598 Reimann, Mathias (ed) and...
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The Charter (Statuut) for the Kingdom represents a de-colonization scheme devised in the 1950s. Rather than separating from what was left of the Dutch colonial empire, the overseas territories of Suriname, in South America, and Curacao, a group of island territories in the Caribbean Sea later renamed Netherlands Antilles, placed their relations with the Netherlands...
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The Congress of Vienna insisted on the creation of a strong buffer state against post Napoleonic France. Therefore the Southern Netherlands, roughly today’s Belgium, were merged into the new Kingdom of the Netherlands in 1815. The Kingdom became known as the ‘United Netherlands’. The Kingdom’s Constitution was amended accordingly by referendum, albeit with limited suffrage...
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Unlike most other subjects in the law school curriculum, Comparative Law is not a body of rules and principles. It is primarily a method, a way of looking at legal problems, legal institutions, and entire legal systems. By the use of the method of comparison, it becomes possible to make observations and to gain insights...
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Comparative Law describes the comparison of various laws; it is not a distinct body of law. This is clearer from the term in German (Rechtsvergleichung) than from the term in other languages (comparative law, droit comparé). Macrocomparison is concerned with entire legal systems; micro-comparison deals with specific institutions or specific problems. Comparative Law thus goes...
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A discussion of the constitutional system of the Netherlands requires a preliminary definition of what exactly is meant by ‘the Netherlands’. In its popular use, the Netherlands is a state in Western Europe, north of Belgium, west of Germany, along the coast of the North Sea. Its present-day constitution dates back to 1814/1815, when after...
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Formally, the Constitution in force today is still the Grondwet for the Kingdom of the Netherlands of 1815. In practice, however, the document is often referred to as the ‘Constitution of 1848’ or as the ‘Constitution of 1983’. These two years saw constitutional amendments so far-reaching that they effectively produced new constitutional texts. The 1848...
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For over a century, English and French lawyers have compared their respective laws of contract. But the purpose of such comparisons has never been agreed. A recent volume of essays by both English and French authors, Contract Law Today: Anglo-French Comparisons, edited by Donald Harris and Denis Tallon, prompts these reflections upon the methods and...
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