Methodologies of legal research edited by Mark Van Hoecke.
Material type: TextLanguage: Series: (European Academy of Legal Theory series)Publication details: U. K. : Hart publishing, 2013.Description: 294 pISBN:- 9781849464994
- 340.0721 VAN/MET
Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | NLUO | NLUO | 340.0721 VAN/MET (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 12039 |
Browsing NLUO shelves Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
340.072073 BAS/FOU Foundations of legal research and writing | 340.072073 SIN/LEG Legal research methodology | 340.072073 SIN/LEG Legal research methodology | 340.0721 VAN/MET Methodologies of legal research | 340.0727 LAW/EMP Empirical methods in law | 340.09 HAV/HIS History of the Middle Temple | 340.09 MEN/IDE Idea of a law school ideas from the law school : |
Table of contents:
Chapter 1. Legal doctrine : which method(s) for what kind of discipline?
Chapter 2. The method of a truly normative legal science
Chapter 3. Explanatory non-normative legal doctrine : taking the distinction between theoretical and practical reason seriously
Chapter 4. A world without law professors
Chapter 5. Open or autonomous? : the debate on legal methodology as a reflection of the debate on law
Chapter 6. Methodology of legal doctrinal research : a comment on Westerman
Chapter 7. The epistemological function of "la doctrine"
Chapter 8. Maps, methodologies and critiques : confessions of a contract lawyer
Chapter 9. Legal research and the distinctiveness of comparative law
Chapter 10. Does one need an understanding of methodology in law before one can understand methodology in comparative law?
Chapter 11. Comparative law, legal linguistics and methodology of legal doctrine
Chapter 12. Doing what doesn't come naturally : on the distinctiveness of comparative law
Chapter 13. Promises and pitfalls of interdisciplinary legal research : the case of evolutionary analysis in law
Chapter 14. Behavioural economics and legal research
Chapter 15. Theory and objection in law : the case for legal scholarship as indirect speech