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 original | Anglès |
|---|---|
| Títol de la publicació | Normative Pluralism and Human Rights |
| Subtítol de la publicació | Social Normativities in Conflict |
| Editors | Kyriaki Topidi |
| Lloc de publicació | New York |
| Editor | Routledge Taylor & Francis Group |
| Capítol | 2 |
| Pàgines | 39-60 |
| Nombre de pàgines | 23 |
| Edició | 1 |
| ISBN (electrònic) | 978-1-315-16523-3 |
| ISBN (imprès) | 978-1-138-05659-6 |
| Estat de la publicació | Publicada - de juny 2018 |
| Publicat externament | Sí |