Fr. 116.40

Judicial Decision-Making in a Globalised World - A Comparative Analysis of Changing Practices of Western Highest

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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Why do judges study legal sources that originated outside their own national legal system, and how do they use arguments from these sources in deciding domestic cases? Based on interviews with judges, this book presents the inside story of how judges engage with international and comparative law in the highest courts of the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States, France and the Netherlands. A comparative analysis of the views and experiences of the judges clarifies how the decision-making of these Western courts has developed in light of the internationalisation of law and the increased opportunities for transnational judicial communication. While the qualitative analysis reveals the motives that judges claim for using foreign law and the influence of ''globalist'' and ''localist'' approaches to judging, the author also finds suggestions of a convergence of practices between the courts that are the subject of this study. This empirical analysis is complemented by a constitutional-theoretical inquiry into the procedural and substantive factors of legal evolution, which enable or constrain the development and possible convergence of highest courts'' practices. The two strands of the analysis are connected in a final contextual reflection on the future development of the role of Western highest courts.>

About the author

Elaine Mak is Professor of Empirical Study of Public Law, in particular of Rule-of-Law Institutions, at the Erasmus University Rotterdam.

Summary

Why do judges study legal sources that originated outside their own national legal system, and how do they use arguments from these sources in deciding domestic cases? Based on interviews with judges, this book presents the inside story of how judges engage with international and comparative law in the highest courts of the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States, France and the Netherlands. A comparative analysis of the views and experiences of the judges clarifies how the decision-making of these Western courts has developed in light of the internationalisation of law and the increased opportunities for transnational judicial communication. While the qualitative analysis reveals the motives that judges claim for using foreign law and the influence of 'globalist' and 'localist' approaches to judging, the author also finds suggestions of a convergence of practices between the courts that are the subject of this study. This empirical analysis is complemented by a constitutional-theoretical inquiry into the procedural and substantive factors of legal evolution, which enable or constrain the development and possible convergence of highest courts' practices. The two strands of the analysis are connected in a final contextual reflection on the future development of the role of Western highest courts.

Product details

Authors Elaine Mak
Publisher Hart Publishing
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 22.11.2013
 
EAN 9781849465540
ISBN 978-1-84946-554-0
No. of pages 290
Dimensions 156 mm x 234 mm x 12 mm
Series Hart Studies in Comparative Pu
Hart Studies in Comparative Public Law
Hart Studies in Comparative Pu
Subject Social sciences, law, business > Law > General, dictionaries

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