The Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective [electronic resource] /edited by Mortimer Sellers, Tadeusz Tomaszewski.
by Sellers, Mortimer [editor.]; Tomaszewski, Tadeusz [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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K7073-7078 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | K7000-7720.22 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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GF1-900 Decentralized Development in Latin America | RC261-271 Protagonists of Medicine | JA1-92 Eco-socialism as Politics | K7000-7720.22 The Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective | Radar Remote Sensing of Urban Areas | LB2300-2799.3 Public Policy for Academic Quality | CC1-960 The Acheulian Site of Gesher Benot Ya’aqov Volume II |
An Introduction to the Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective -- The Rule of Law in Ancient Greek Thought -- The Liberal State and Criminal Law Reform in Spain -- Some Realism About Legal Certainty in the Globalization of the Rule of Law -- Is Goal-Based Regulation Consistent with the Rule of Law? -- Reflections on Shakespeare and the Rule of Law -- America's Constitutional Rule of Law: Structure and Symbol -- Constitutions Without Constitutionalism: The Failure of Constitutionalism in Brazil -- Rule of Law, Power Distribution, and the Problem of Faction in Conflict Interventions -- The Rule of Law in Transitional Justice: The Fujimori Trial in Peru -- The Interaction of Customary Law with the Modern Rule of Law in Albania and Kosova -- Dualism, Domestic Courts, and the Rule of International Law.
This new volume on The Rule of Law in Comparative Perspective compares the different conceptions of the rule of law that have developed in different legal cultures. Lawyers and legal scholars from various legal systems describe the social purposes and practical applications of the rule of law, and how it might be improved in the varied circumstances of their own courts and politics. This book will be of interest to lawyers, judges, public officials, and to all those wishing to improve the fundamental structures of their own legal systems, by bringing equal justice to every person subject to the power of the state.
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