Arret De Parlement Qui Condamne A Etre Lacere Et Brule Par L Executeur De La Haute Justice Comme Seditieux Un Ecrit Imprime Intitule Lettre De M De Conseiller Au Parlement De Rouen A M De M Premier President A Le 26 Octobre 1768 Sans Nom D Auteur Ni D Imprimeur

Download Arret De Parlement Qui Condamne A Etre Lacere Et Brule Par L Executeur De La Haute Justice Comme Seditieux Un Ecrit Imprime Intitule Lettre De M De Conseiller Au Parlement De Rouen A M De M Premier President A Le 26 Octobre 1768 Sans Nom D Auteur Ni D Imprimeur PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Arret De Parlement Qui Condamne A Etre Lacere Et Brule Par L Executeur De La Haute Justice Comme Seditieux Un Ecrit Imprime Intitule Lettre De M De Conseiller Au Parlement De Rouen A M De M Premier President A Le 26 Octobre 1768 Sans Nom D Auteur Ni D Imprimeur book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Interpretation of Law in the Age of Enlightenment

Author: Yasutomo Morigiwa
language: en
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Release Date: 2011-06-29
A collaboration of leading historians of European law and philosophers of law and politics identifying and explaining the practice of interpretation of law in the 18th century. The goal: establishing the actual practice in the Age of Enlightenment, and explaining why this was the case. The ideology of the Age was that law, i.e., the will of the sovereign, can be explicitly and appropriately stated, thus making interpretation redundant. However, the reality was that in the 18th century, there was no one leading source of national law that would be the object of interpretation. Instead, there was a plurality of sources of law: the Roman Law, local customary law, and the royal ordinance. However, in deciding a case in a court of law, the law must speak with one voice. Hence, interpretation to unify the norms was inevitable. What was the process? What role did justification in terms of reason, the hallmark of the Enlightenment, play? These are some of the questions addressed.
Methodologies of Legal Research

Author: Mark Van Hoecke
language: en
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Release Date: 2011-02-28
Until quite recently questions about methodology in legal research have been largely confined to understanding the role of doctrinal research as a scholarly discipline. In turn this has involved asking questions not only about coverage but, fundamentally, questions about the identity of the discipline. Is it (mainly) descriptive, hermeneutical, or normative? Should it also be explanatory? Legal scholarship has been torn between, on the one hand, grasping the expanding reality of law and its context, and, on the other, reducing this complex whole to manageable proportions. The purely internal analysis of a legal system, isolated from any societal context, remains an option, and is still seen in the approach of the French academy, but as law aims at ordering society and influencing human behaviour, this approach is felt by many scholars to be insufficient. Consequently many attempts have been made to conceive legal research differently. Social scientific and comparative approaches have proven fruitful. However, does the introduction of other approaches leave merely a residue of 'legal doctrine', to which pockets of social sciences can be added, or should legal doctrine be merged with the social sciences? What would such a broad interdisciplinary field look like and what would its methods be? This book is an attempt to answer some of these questions.