Papers of Sir Otto Kahn-Freund, (1940-1979), mainly relating to his work in the field of legal science, and comprising extensive working papers for publications and lectures, as well as correspondence with colleagues and friends.
Comparative law as an academic subject by Otto Kahn-Freund. In memoriam, Sir Otto Kahn-Freund, 17.11. 1900-16.8. 1979: international collection of essays: . This volume of the 'International Encyclopedia of Comparative Law' deals with labour law. La Participation.Part of theComparative and Foreign Law Commons,Law and Philosophy Commons, and the. Legal Education Commons. This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Publications at Scholarship Archive.Comparative law has been a cornerstone of legal studies at the LSE at least since Professor Otto Kahn-Freund joined the Law Department in the 1930s.Today’s LSE law department is truly international, with full-time members of academic staff from every continent, with diverse academic and professional qualifications, who integrate interdisciplinary approaches in their research.
To regard comparative law as intertwined with legal theory or jurisprudence is one thing, to utilise comparative legal research exclusively to test theories and see it simply as a helping hand to legal theory is another; because in that second sense, comparative law is still not a subject in itself.
THE NATURE OF LEGAL SCHOLARSHIP. sciences, comparative law and philosophy as specially scientific or. l8 Kahn-Freund, “On Uses and Abuses of Comparative Law” (1974) 37 M.L.R. l9 Whish and Sufrin, “Article 85 and the rule of reason” (1987) Yearbook of Euro-.
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Additional Physical Format: Online version: Kahn-Freund, Otto, Sir, 1900-Comparative law as an academic subject. Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1965 (OCoLC)609865736.
Comparative law is a field with a rich history, and one to which scholars from many disciplines have contributed. This four-volume set includes an original introduction by the editors, who trace the major developments in the field, covering both private and public law, as well as legal institutions and methodological debates.
The enterprise of comparative law is familiar yet its conceptual whereabouts remain somewhat obscure. The purpose of this book is to reconstruct extant comparative law scholarship into a systematic account of comparative law as an autonomous academic discipline. The object of that discipline is neither to harmonize world law, nor to.
Comparative law is an academic discipline that involves the study of legal systems, including their constitutive elements and how they differ, and how their elements combine into a system.
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Comparative law is the study of differences and similarities between the law (legal systems) of different countries. More specifically, it involves the study of the different legal systems (or families) in existence in the world, including the common law, the civil law, socialist law, Canon law, Jew.
II. Comparative Labour Law: A Taxonomy. 1. The Descriptive. 2. The Predictive. 3. The Purposive. 4. The Multidimensional. III. The Role of Comparative Labour Law.
AN EVOLUTIONARY APPROACH TO COMPARATIVE TAXATION: METHODS AND AGENDA FOR RESEARCH. Northwestern University Law Review, 198 (1977); Kahn-Freund, “On Uses and Misuses of Comparative Law,” 37 Modern Law Rev. 1. “Comparative and Private International Law: Essays in Honor of John Henry Merryman on his.
The Linklaters Chair in Comparative Law 21 Mar 2013 The Faculty of Law is delighted to announce that the Professorship of Comparative Law, held by Professor Stefan Vogenauer, Director of the Institute of European and Comparative Law, has become the Linklaters Professorship of Comparative Law.
Professor Kahn-Freund2 on the other hand wrote about comparative law as a subject that can be used as a tool for bringing about law refonn, as opposed to comparative law being used as a tool for research.3 The fol1owing questions, which will be critical in this.