Wildy Logo
(020) 7242 5778
enquiries@wildy.com

Book of the Month

Cover of Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata

Spencer Bower and Handley: Res Judicata

Price: £449.99

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


Welcome to Wildys

Watch


NEW EDITION Pre-order The Law of Rights of Light 2nd ed



 Jonathan Karas


Offers for Newly Called Barristers & Students

Special Discounts for Newly Called & Students

Read More ...


Secondhand & Out of Print

Browse Secondhand Online

Read More...


The Uses of Justice in Global Perspective, 1600-1900

Edited by: Griet Vermeesch, Manon van der Heijden, Jaco Zuijderduijn

ISBN13: 9781138476783
Published: December 2018
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £145.00



This is a Print On Demand Title.
The publisher will print a copy to fulfill your order. Books can take between 1 to 3 weeks. Looseleaf titles between 1 to 2 weeks.

The Uses of Justice in Global Perspective, 1600–1900 presents a new perspective on the uses of justice between 1600 and 1900 and confronts prevailing Eurocentric historiography in its examination of how people of this period made use of the law.

Between 1600 and 1900 the towns in Western Europe, the Kingdoms in Eastern Europe, the Empires in Asia and the Colonial States in Asia and the Americas were all characterised by a plurality of legal orders resulting from interactions and negotiations between states, institutions, and people with different backgrounds. Through exploring how justice is used within these different areas of the world, this book offers a broad global perspective, but it also adopts a fresh approach through shifting attention away from states and onto how ordinary people lived with and made use of this ‘legal pluralism’.

Containing a wealth of extensively contextualised case studies and contributing to debates on socio-legal history, processes of state formation from below, access to justice, and legal pluralism, The Uses of Justice in Global Perspective, 1600–1900 questions to what degree top-down imposed formal institutions were used and how, and to what degree, bottom-up crafted legal systems were crucial in allowing transactions to happen. It is ideal for students and scholars of early modern justice, crime and legal history.

Subjects:
Legal History
Contents:
1. The uses of justice in global perspective, 1600–1900
Manon van der Heijden and Griet Vermeesch
2. The Sinitic justice system, past and present – in a global perspective
Philip C. C. Huang
3. Threads of the legal web: Dutch law and everyday colonialism in eighteenth-century Asia
Alicia Schrikker and Dries Lyna
4. Facing the law in eighteenth-century Galle
Nadeera Rupesinghe
5. Legal pluralism in the cities of the early modern Kingdom of Poland: the jurisdictional conflicts and uses of justice by Armenian merchants
Alexandr Osipian
6. The use and abuse of legal services in nineteenth-century Russia
Elizaveta Blagodeteleva
7. Skipping court: civil disputes in sixteenth-century Rouen
Katherine Godwin
8. In hope of agreement: norm and practice in the use of institutes for dispute settlement in late-seventeenth-century Leiden
Aries van Meeteren and Griet Vermeesch
9. Justice and the confines of the law in early modern Spain
Tomás A. Mantecón
10. Lo extrajudicial: between court and community in the Spanish empire
Bianca Premo
11. Legal pluralism, hybridization and the uses of everyday criminal law in Quebec, 1760–1867
Donald Fyson

Index