Rethinking Legal Scholarship
Herausgeber: Gestel, Rob van; Rubin, Edward L.; Micklitz, Hans-W.
Rethinking Legal Scholarship
Herausgeber: Gestel, Rob van; Rubin, Edward L.; Micklitz, Hans-W.
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Rethinking Legal Scholarship bridges the gap between American and European legal scholarship by looking at underlying methodological challenges.
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Rethinking Legal Scholarship bridges the gap between American and European legal scholarship by looking at underlying methodological challenges.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 558
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Januar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 798g
- ISBN-13: 9781107578722
- ISBN-10: 1107578728
- Artikelnr.: 52528775
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 558
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Januar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 798g
- ISBN-13: 9781107578722
- ISBN-10: 1107578728
- Artikelnr.: 52528775
List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction Rob van Gestel,
Hans-W. Micklitz and Edward L. Rubin; Part I. Where Is Legal Scholarship
Headed in the New Legal World?: 1. Why we do what we do: comparing legal
methods in five law schools through survey evidence Mathias M. Siems and
Daithí Mac Síthigh; 2. The jurist in a global age Neil Walker; 3. Field,
frame and focus: methodological issues in the new legal world Roger
Brownsword; 4. Transatlantic publication fashions: in search of quality and
methodology in law journal articles Reza Dibadi; Part II. Should Doctrinal
Legal Scholarship Be Abandoned?: 5. What is legal doctrine?: on the aims
and methods of legal-dogmatic research Jan M. Smits; 6. Making doctrine for
European law Nils Jansen; 7. A European advantage in legal scholarship?
Hans-W. Micklitz; 8. From coherence to effectiveness: a legal methodology
for the modern world Edward L. Rubin; 9. Ranking, peer review,
bibliometrics and alternative ways to improve the quality of doctrinal
legal scholarship Rob van Gestel; Part III. The Interaction of Legal
Scholarship with Other Academic Disciplines: 10. The logic of the law: the
analytical foundations of methodology Neil Komesar; 11. The role of
empirical legal studies in legal scholarship, legal education and policy
making: a US perspective Deborah R. Hensler and Matthew A. Gasperetti; 12.
A behavioural law and economics perspective: between methodology and
indeology when behavioural sciences meet law Orly Lobel; 12. Freedom and
method Paul Kahn; Index.
Hans-W. Micklitz and Edward L. Rubin; Part I. Where Is Legal Scholarship
Headed in the New Legal World?: 1. Why we do what we do: comparing legal
methods in five law schools through survey evidence Mathias M. Siems and
Daithí Mac Síthigh; 2. The jurist in a global age Neil Walker; 3. Field,
frame and focus: methodological issues in the new legal world Roger
Brownsword; 4. Transatlantic publication fashions: in search of quality and
methodology in law journal articles Reza Dibadi; Part II. Should Doctrinal
Legal Scholarship Be Abandoned?: 5. What is legal doctrine?: on the aims
and methods of legal-dogmatic research Jan M. Smits; 6. Making doctrine for
European law Nils Jansen; 7. A European advantage in legal scholarship?
Hans-W. Micklitz; 8. From coherence to effectiveness: a legal methodology
for the modern world Edward L. Rubin; 9. Ranking, peer review,
bibliometrics and alternative ways to improve the quality of doctrinal
legal scholarship Rob van Gestel; Part III. The Interaction of Legal
Scholarship with Other Academic Disciplines: 10. The logic of the law: the
analytical foundations of methodology Neil Komesar; 11. The role of
empirical legal studies in legal scholarship, legal education and policy
making: a US perspective Deborah R. Hensler and Matthew A. Gasperetti; 12.
A behavioural law and economics perspective: between methodology and
indeology when behavioural sciences meet law Orly Lobel; 12. Freedom and
method Paul Kahn; Index.
List of contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction Rob van Gestel,
Hans-W. Micklitz and Edward L. Rubin; Part I. Where Is Legal Scholarship
Headed in the New Legal World?: 1. Why we do what we do: comparing legal
methods in five law schools through survey evidence Mathias M. Siems and
Daithí Mac Síthigh; 2. The jurist in a global age Neil Walker; 3. Field,
frame and focus: methodological issues in the new legal world Roger
Brownsword; 4. Transatlantic publication fashions: in search of quality and
methodology in law journal articles Reza Dibadi; Part II. Should Doctrinal
Legal Scholarship Be Abandoned?: 5. What is legal doctrine?: on the aims
and methods of legal-dogmatic research Jan M. Smits; 6. Making doctrine for
European law Nils Jansen; 7. A European advantage in legal scholarship?
Hans-W. Micklitz; 8. From coherence to effectiveness: a legal methodology
for the modern world Edward L. Rubin; 9. Ranking, peer review,
bibliometrics and alternative ways to improve the quality of doctrinal
legal scholarship Rob van Gestel; Part III. The Interaction of Legal
Scholarship with Other Academic Disciplines: 10. The logic of the law: the
analytical foundations of methodology Neil Komesar; 11. The role of
empirical legal studies in legal scholarship, legal education and policy
making: a US perspective Deborah R. Hensler and Matthew A. Gasperetti; 12.
A behavioural law and economics perspective: between methodology and
indeology when behavioural sciences meet law Orly Lobel; 12. Freedom and
method Paul Kahn; Index.
Hans-W. Micklitz and Edward L. Rubin; Part I. Where Is Legal Scholarship
Headed in the New Legal World?: 1. Why we do what we do: comparing legal
methods in five law schools through survey evidence Mathias M. Siems and
Daithí Mac Síthigh; 2. The jurist in a global age Neil Walker; 3. Field,
frame and focus: methodological issues in the new legal world Roger
Brownsword; 4. Transatlantic publication fashions: in search of quality and
methodology in law journal articles Reza Dibadi; Part II. Should Doctrinal
Legal Scholarship Be Abandoned?: 5. What is legal doctrine?: on the aims
and methods of legal-dogmatic research Jan M. Smits; 6. Making doctrine for
European law Nils Jansen; 7. A European advantage in legal scholarship?
Hans-W. Micklitz; 8. From coherence to effectiveness: a legal methodology
for the modern world Edward L. Rubin; 9. Ranking, peer review,
bibliometrics and alternative ways to improve the quality of doctrinal
legal scholarship Rob van Gestel; Part III. The Interaction of Legal
Scholarship with Other Academic Disciplines: 10. The logic of the law: the
analytical foundations of methodology Neil Komesar; 11. The role of
empirical legal studies in legal scholarship, legal education and policy
making: a US perspective Deborah R. Hensler and Matthew A. Gasperetti; 12.
A behavioural law and economics perspective: between methodology and
indeology when behavioural sciences meet law Orly Lobel; 12. Freedom and
method Paul Kahn; Index.