Beyond the pedagogical beauty of dichotomy: Comparative law methodology in liquid times

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Resum

This chapter describes the issue of comparative law methodology notably in the way it has been traditionally proposed as a choice between functionalist or contextualist methods. A dichotomous approach is arguably fascinating and effective from a pedagogical viewpoint. The chapter argues that comparative law appears deeply anchored to a dichotomous mindset that tends to reduce any scenario into a contrast between two options: irreducible and often conflicting alternatives. Comparative law as a sub-discipline has been moving 'from a relatively marginal role to a much more central role', shifting from being considered as the 'Cindarella' to the 'Queen' of legal sciences. There are two main re-thinking exercises that comparative lawyers are deepening in order to globalize their discipline: geographical and thematic. William Twining has described comparative law as a 'long-running and unsatisfactory debate about how major systems, tradition, or families of law should be classified'.
Idioma originalAnglès
Títol de la publicacióNormative Pluralism and Human Rights
Subtítol de la publicacióSocial Normativities in Conflict
EditorsKyriaki Topidi
Lloc de publicacióNew York
EditorRoutledge Taylor & Francis Group
Capítol2
Pàgines39-60
Nombre de pàgines23
Edició1
ISBN (electrònic)978-1-315-16523-3
ISBN (imprès)978-1-138-05659-6
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - de juny 2018
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