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New Release: Global Legal History – A Methodological Approach
June 2, 2016
Global Legal History – A Methodological Approach by Thomas Duve has recently been published in the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History Research Paper Series on SSRN.com.
Since
the 1990s, the attempts to supplement the conventional, overwhelmingly
national historiographical traditions via the introduction of a global
dimension have been on the rise. In the meantime, a number of legal
historical publications, articles, and even institutions have
increasingly been making use of the term ›global. The
transnationalization of law as well as the rise of global history and
global studies in general are having an impact on legal historiography.
Since the world's legal systems are currently undergoing significant
transformations, both the need for fundamental reflections about law and
legal scholarship as well as a new call for long-term perspectives on a
global scale has become clear. As a result, there is a growing demand
for global legal history.
However, there is neither a consensus as to
what global legal history is, nor as to what objectives this kind of
legal historiography pursues, nor even as to where it is to be located
in relation to other disciplines. The following article attempts to
sketch out a general panorama and point to some of the central
difficulties confronting global legal history.