ABSTRACT

This book discusses a number of important themes in comparative law: legal metaphors and methodology, the movements of legal ideas and institutions and the mixity they produce, and marriage, an area of law in which culture – or clashes of legal and public cultures – may be particularly evident. In a mix of methodological and empirical investigations divided by these themes, the work offers expanded analyses and a unique cross-section of materials that is on the cutting edge of comparative law scholarship. It presents an innovative approach to legal pluralism, the study of mixed jurisdictions, and language and the law, with the use of metaphors not as an illustration but as a core element of comparative methodology.

chapter 1|11 pages

‘Of mixes, movements, and metaphors’

Esin Örücü’s critical comparative law

chapter 2|19 pages

Island, intersection, or in-between?

Legal hybridity and diffusion in the Seychellois legal tradition, c. 1715–1950

chapter 3|16 pages

Legislating for customary land tenure

A comparative query

chapter 5|20 pages

On kites and ships

Climate changes in comparative law and judicial navigation

chapter 6|11 pages

On lifelong and fixed-term marriage

A study in estrangement

chapter 9|14 pages

A legal transplant

French law in Dutch shallow waters 1

chapter 10|22 pages

The rule of law in Turkey

Two steps forward, one step back