Are mixed legal systems necessarily systems in transition, or can they achieve stability?

Do they remain mixes of Civil and Common law, or can they become creative sources of their own distinctive type of rules?

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Law, International
Big bigCover of Are mixed legal systems necessarily systems in transition, or can they achieve stability?

More books from GRIN Publishing

bigCover of the book The Political Process in the European Union: Decision Making Procedures and Implementation of Policy by
bigCover of the book Managing People in International Hospitality &Tourism Industries by
bigCover of the book Corporate finance and the theory of the firm by
bigCover of the book Passing and the Problem of Identity in Afro-American Literature by
bigCover of the book Functioning like a clockwork - musicality in 'A Clockwork Orange' by
bigCover of the book Foreign Market Servicing Strategies - the METROGroup in China by
bigCover of the book International Perspectives on Protection of Child Rights by
bigCover of the book The Use of Ontologies in Practice by
bigCover of the book The position of women in the New World's Puritan Society in the seventeenth century by
bigCover of the book The conversion of Iceland - a political event by
bigCover of the book Matlab Particles 2.0 by
bigCover of the book Culture Therapy by
bigCover of the book The Representation of African Americans in Steven Spielberg's 'Amistad' by
bigCover of the book Sir Francis Drake and the Ethnocentric Behaviour by
bigCover of the book Compulsory Domesticity? - Comparing gender notions of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and John Stuart Mill in 'Émile' and 'The Subjection of Women' by
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy