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Modernisation, National Identity and Legal Instrumentalism (Vol. II: Public Law): Studies in Comparative Legal History: Legal History Library, cartea 36

Michał Gałędek, Anna Klimaszewska
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 18 dec 2019
The driving force of the dynamic development of world legal history in the past few centuries, with the dominance of the West, was clearly the demands of modernisation – transforming existing reality into what is seen as modern. The need for modernisation, determining the development of modern law, however, clashed with the need to preserve cultural identity rooted in national traditions. With selected examples of different legal institutions, countries and periods, the authors of the essays in the two volumes Modernisation, National Identity and Legal Instrumentalism: Studies in Comparative Legal History, vol. I: Private Law and Modernisation, National Identity and Legal Instrumentalism: Studies in Comparative Legal History, vol. II: Public Law seek to explain the nature of this problem.

Contributors are Judit Beke-Martos, Jiří Brňovják, Marjorie Carvalho de Souza, Michał Gałędek, Imre Képessy, Ivan Kosnica, Simon Lavis, Maja Maciejewska-Szałas, Tadeusz Maciejewski, Thomas Mohr, Balázs Pálvölgyi, and Marek Starý.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004417151
ISBN-10: 900441715X
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Legal History Library


Cuprins

Notes on Contributors

1 Residential Right in the Course of Time: Changes in the Legal Institution of the Inkolat in the Bohemian Crown Lands
Jiří BrňovjákandMarek Starý

2 Legal Transfers and National Traditions: Patterns of Modernization of the Administration in Polish Territories at the Turn of the 19th Century
Michał Gałędek

3 National Modernization through the Constitutional Revolution of 1848 in Hungary: Pretext and Context
Imre Képessy

4 Restoring the Hungarian Historical Constitutional Order with a Coronation in 1867
Judit Beke-Martos

5 The Privy Council Appeal and British Imperial Policy, 1833–1939
Thomas Mohr

6 Direct Impact on Hungarian Migration Policy of the 1870 Agreement on Citizenship between the United States and Austria-Hungary (1880s–1914)
Balázs Pálvölgyi

7 Political Systems in Transition and Cultural (In)dependence: The Limits of a Legal Transplant in the Example of the Brazilian’s Court of Auditors Birth
Marjorie Carvalho de Souza

8 Constitutional Systems of Free European States (1918–1939)
Tadeusz Maciejewski and Maja Maciejewska-Szałas

9 Local Citizenship in the Croatian-Slavonian Legal Area in the First Yugoslavia (1918–1941): Breakdown of a Concept?
Ivan Kosnica

10 Nazi Law as Pure Instrument: Natural Law, (Extra-)Legal Terror, and the Neglect of Ideology
Simon Lavis
Index

Notă biografică

Michał Gałędek Ph.D. (2010), University of Gdańsk, is Professor in the Department of Legal History, Faculty of Law and Administration. In his research he focuses on the Polish administration, judiciary, constitutionalism, and political thought at the beginning of the 19th century and in the interwar period.

Anna Klimaszewska Ph.D. (2011), University of Gdańsk, is Assistant Professor in the Department of Legal History, Faculty of Law and Administration. In her research she focuses on the influence exerted by the French law on the shape of the Polish legal system, commercial law, civil procedure and national legal identity in the 19th century.