Full Description
Law in a World of Multiple Legal Orders offers a foundational understanding of what law is and how it operates, while acknowledging that contemporary law is unavoidably cross-border.
Starting with the basic idea of law and its relationship with justice, the book introduces the main legal traditions, courts and constitutions, before moving on to civil procedure and litigation, legal borrowing between systems, international and supranational law - including European law - and the growing role of alternative dispute resolution, such as arbitration and mediation. Conceived as an international introduction to law that also serves as a natural gateway to international law, the book is designed to help students from different legal traditions understand the nature and functions of law, while giving them the conceptual tools needed to engage more deeply with the major fields of law, such as contract law (and the law of obligations more generally), criminal law, administrative law, corporate law, family law, and a multitude of others. It performs the conventional function of an introduction to law, laying the foundations for understanding the role of law and legal institutions in the contemporary world.
By offering a modern and accessible introduction to law for the realities of a global and interconnected world, it helps students build a solid understanding of law across legal systems and brings together, in a single volume, what would normally take years to learn.
This will be essential reading for introduction to law courses, as well as for courses in international, transnational and comparative law.
Contents
Introduction. Chapter 1 What is Law? What Forms Does Law Take? Chapter 2 The Historical Development of Law and Justice. Chapter 3 The Civil Law Tradition. Chapter 4 The Common Law Tradition. Chapter 5 Constitutionalism and Judicial Review. Chapter 6 Civil Procedure: The Judiciary and the Unfolding of Civil Litigation. Chapter 7 When and Why Do Courts Apply the Law of Other Countries? Chapter 8 The Transplant Debate. Chapter 9 What is International Law and How is it Made? Chapter 10 The Interface of National and International Law. Chapter 11 Supranationalism: The European Union. Chapter 12 International Arbitration: Privatized Justice.



