2019
DOI: 10.1093/ajcl/avaa001
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Deglobalizing Rule of Law and Democracy: Hunting Down Rhetoric Through Comparative Law

Abstract: Notwithstanding the well-known differences that run through cultures and traditions, the West has never stopped trying to export its own law into the rest of the world. During and after the colonial era similar endeavors were spreading Western views on how legal issues are to be understood and handled, thereby broadening the West’s area of influence on global legal affairs. More recently, these efforts have overlapped with (and have been blurred by the rhetorical veil of) so-called legal globalization. The foc… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…4 However, for practitioners and policy makers, it remains a useful (albeit possibly narrow) method for looking at discrete aspects of good or poor practice while avoiding over-generalisation. 5 Additionally, some of the usual critiques of the functional method are ill-suited when applied to this work. As evidenced below, the study adopts a solid theoretical framework that clearly discloses its 'inputs' and foundational principles.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4 However, for practitioners and policy makers, it remains a useful (albeit possibly narrow) method for looking at discrete aspects of good or poor practice while avoiding over-generalisation. 5 Additionally, some of the usual critiques of the functional method are ill-suited when applied to this work. As evidenced below, the study adopts a solid theoretical framework that clearly discloses its 'inputs' and foundational principles.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%