Comparative Law (CL) is not a branch of positive law but is closer to legal science (science juridique). It has no subject matter of its own, such as contract law or criminal law, because its content is borrowed from other legal fields and foreign legal systems. Its primary purpose is to facilitate understanding and analysis across different legal systems, rather than to establish autonomous legal rules.
Legal pluralism recognizes that multiple sources of legal legitimacy coexist beyond the State, including tradition, religion, and inter-state agreements. It challenges the idea that only the State can create law, emphasizing that various sources contribute to legal authority.
Judicial comparativism involves judges considering foreign law and legal ideas in their decision-making process, beyond conflict-of-law rules. It reflects a practical application of comparative law at the judicial level, encouraging a broader perspective on legal reasoning.
1. Who is credited with defining Comparative Law as a tool akin to legal science that borrows content from various legal fields and foreign systems?
2. What is the primary purpose of Comparative Law (CL) according to the course outline?
3. What is a primary effect of selecting specific objects of legal comparison such as laws, case law, and legal concepts?
Comparative Law — definition?
A tool akin to legal science, analyzing legal systems.
Comparative Law — primary purpose?
Facilitate understanding across legal systems
Objects of comparison — examples?
Laws, legal systems, case law, concepts, classifications.
Legal pluralism — sources?
Tradition, religion, inter-state agreements
Judicial comparativism — role?
Judges consider foreign law in decisions
Tertium comparationis — purpose?
Standard guiding legal comparison
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