Law and anthropology:
Gespeichert in:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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München
C.H. Beck
2016
Baden-Baden Nomos |
Ausgabe: | Second edition |
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXII, 547 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9783848713196 9781849467896 9783406659072 |
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250 | |a Second edition | ||
264 | 1 | |a München |b C.H. Beck |c 2016 | |
264 | 1 | |a Baden-Baden |b Nomos | |
264 | 4 | |a Oxford |b Hart |c © 2016 | |
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adam_text | Table of Contents
Mottos ...........- ,m
Preface to the second edition................................................................ VII
From the preface to the first edition ....................................................... IX
Acknowledgments ................................................................................ XV
Survey of Contents ........................................................................... AVil
List of illustrations ......................................................................... XIX
Table of abbreviations ........................................................................XXXI
PARI ONE
ANTHROPOLOGY OF LAW IN GENERAL
Chapter X. Anthropology of law as a science ................................................. 1
I Definitions. Issues and tasks. Approaches. Types of cases ............................. 1
1. Anthropology, ethnology, and ethnography of law...................................... 1
2. Issues ................................................................................. 2
3. Theory, research, and applied anthropology.............................................. 4
4. Two approaches to the anthropology of law .......................................... 5
5. Anthropology of law and morals ......................................................... 6
6. Types of cases .....................................................................
IL Anthropology of law as a social science ............................................... 8
1. The concept of science against the background of the Leibniz-Hume-Kant debate. The
scientism problem........................................................................ 8
2. History and system. Diachronic vs. synchronic research (de Saussure) ............... 9
3. Anthropology and related fields..................................................... 10
4. Anthropological epistemology .......................................................... 13
5. Ontology and epistemology. An anthropology of knowledge ............................ 19
6. The role of writing ................................................................... 20
7. Judgments (= propositions) in anthropology.......................................... 21
8. The nature of anthropological reasoning............................................. 21
9. Results of Chapter 1 II ............................................................ 23
III. Anthropological meaning of law........................................................... 23
1. The issues ............................................................................ 23
2. Legal and other social norms........................................................... 23
3. Towards an anthropological definition of law .......................................... 24
4. Pospisil’s definition of law. The theory of “mononorms” ............................... 28
5. A new definition?...................................................................... 32
6. Definition of law, summarized.......................................................... 34
IV. Legal pluralism.......................................................................... 36
1. Issues .............................................................................. 36
2. An incomplete history of the discussion so far......................................... 37
3. Legal pluralism as a consequence of the conflict of laws............................... 40
4. Legal pluralism as an issue of source and definition of law, and of cultural identity . 42
V. The structure of anthropology: branches, fields, and subfields ....................... 43
1. A division for international usage ................................................. 44
2. The German tradition .................................................................. 44
3. A qualitative division for scientific purposes ..................................... 44
4. Segments for teaching anthropology (curricular programs) ........................... 47
5. The outline used in this book ...................................................... 47
VI. Anthropological systems theory........................................................... 49
Chapter 2. History, schools, and names of anthropology of law................................ 50
I. The history of anthropology in general, and of the anthropology of law in particular... 50
1. Precursors ............................................................................ 50
2. Missionaries .......................................................................... 51
3. Adventurers ......................................................................... 51
4. Herder and Kleinm ..................................................................... 51
5. German idealism: Kant and Hegel ....................................................... 52
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6. A. and W. von Humboldt................................................................ 52
7. German Volkskunde, and a preview on “European Ethnology” ............................. 53
II. Traditions and schools ................................................................. 54
1. The evolutionists. Diachronic and synchronic research ................................ 55
2. Historical-comparative directions ....................................................... 58
3. Functionalists and the British-American compromise. Materialists. Ecologists. Structuralists 62
4. The modern Austrian and Dutch schools ................................................... 65
5. Anthropologists of law .................................................................. 66
6. Marxists. Postmodern authors and the “crisis”. Eric Wolf, Sherry Ortner, Marshall Sahlins 66
7. German Historische Anthropologie ........................................................ 68
8. Modes of thought, “mind-sets”, “world views”, “mentalities” .......................... 68
9. New developments in Europe. Collections .............................................. 70
10. Anthropological philosophy. Anthropological theology ................................. 70
Chapter 3. Concepts of cultural anthropology .................................................. 75
I. Culture and Cultures ...................................................................... 75
1. Definition............................................................................... 75
2. Holistic sense of culture ............................................................... 76
3. Plurality of Cultures. Subcultures. Counterculture ................................... 78
4. Modes of Thought............. ........................................................ 80
5. Identity and ethnicity .................................................................. 80
II. Society ................................................................................... 82
III. Civilization. Civilizational stages........................................................ 83
IV. People .................................................................................... 87
V. Nation. Tribe. Clan. Lineage. Ramage ...................................................... 87
VI. Moiety. Phratry ........................................................................... 88
1. Moieties ................................................................................ 88
2. Other cultural dualities. Phratries ..................................................... 90
3. Moieties as parts of a system of separate powers ........................................ 91
4. Moieties as parts of a superadditive units............................................... 91
VII. Extended Family. Nuclear Family. Household. Brotherhood.................................. 91
1. Extended family ......................................................................... 91
2. Nuclear family........................................................................... 91
3. Household................................................................................ 91
4. Brotherhood ............................................................................. 92
VIII. Race. Racism ............................................................................... 92
IX. Belief System. Religion. Myth ............................................................. 93
1. Belief systems .......................................................................... 93
2. Make-believe worlds ..................................................................... 93
3. Religion................................................................................. 94
4. Myth .................................................................................... 97
X. Law. Justice .............................................................................. 98
Chapter 4. Social norms (fora) (the theory of law, morals, custom, etiquette, habits, religious
norms, political force, conscience) ................................................. 100
I. Social norms ............................................................................. 101
II. Kinds of Social Norms .................................................................. 102
1. Norms of Law ........................................................................... 102
2. Ethics, Morals, Customs ............................................................... 103
3. Habits, Etiquette....................................................................... 105
4. Religious Norms......................................................................... 106
5. Habits and craft practices of a religious nature ....................................... 106
6. Political prescripts ................................................................. 106
7. Conscience ............................................................................. 106
III. Fora Issues .............................................................................. 107
1. Conflicts between fora (examples) ...................................................... 107
2. Acting in a forum conflict situation ................................................. 108
3. Forum transgression .................................................................... 108
4. The question of a historical primate: Which type of social norm came first? .......... 109
5. Challenge and transgression of forum ................................................. 110
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Chapter 5. Theories of culture and cultures .....................................................
j. Structures of cultures ....................................................................
1. Overt themes ............................................................................
2 Covert themes ............................................................................
II Surveys of culture and cultures. Human Relations Area Files (HRAF). Axial age, modes of
thought, and law ...........................................................................
1. “Raw structures” ........................................................................
2. HRAF ...................................................................................
3. Pre- and post-axial age cultures .......................................................
III Theory of culture and cultures. Cultural holism and pluralism: Cultural time concepts .....
1. Culture .................................................................................
2. Cultures ................................................................................
3. From history to system and return .......................................................
4. Cultural universāls and cultural specificities. Murdock s list .........................
5 Time concepts. Modes of thought. Aspectivity and perspectivity. Links between time and
space ....................................................................................
IV person. Individuality. Identity. Culture personality. Vita research .......................
1. Person...................................................................................
2. Identity ................................................................................
3. Culture personality......................................................................
4. Vita research ...........................................................................
V Circles of cultures, based on the “two revolutions” (neolithic, urban) and on the modes of
thought (pre-axial age incl. Ancient Egyptian; Southeast Asian; Western; Islamic; secular-
totalitarian) ..............................................................................
1. The “two revolutions” ...................................................................
2. Pre-axial-age cultures. Societal inertia ................................................
3. (Post-axial age) East and South Asian cultures...........................................
4. Post-axial age Tragic cultures ..........................................................
5. Post-axial age Judaism and Christianity .................................................
6. Islam ...................................................................................
VI. Acculturation (an enlarged theory) ........................................................
1. Biculturality ...........................................................................
2. Coexistence .............................................................................
3. Acculturation (classic terminology)......................................................
VII. Culture change and culture loss............................................................
1. Culture change defined...................................................................
2. Restudies. Culture loss..................................................................
VIII. Culture transfer, receptions, transplants, internalization. Legal families ................
1. Culture transfer.........................................................................
2. Reception ..............................................................................
3. Internalization.........................................................................
4. Legal families .........................................................................
IX. The anthropology of borders, corridors, trails, and trading routes ........................
1. Anthropology of borders .................................................................
2. Anthropology of corridors .............................................................
3. Anthropology of trails and trading routes ..............................................
X. Forms of cultural neighborhood (in situations of cultural boundaries, enclaves, ghettos,
“melting pots”).............................................................................
XI. The anthropologies of minorities, and second and third state peoples ......................
XII. Migration..................................................................................
XIII. Cultural justice and cultural rights. Intercultural justice. Tolerance and its paradox.....
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156
183
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191
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200
Chapter 6. Analyses in cultural anthropology................................................. 205
I. Ethnocentric analysis. Ethnocentrism and exoticism .................................... 207
II. Vision of the Participants”, folkways, and emic-etic analysis. Leyden School of Anthropology 209
III. Componential Analysis .................................................................. 210
IV. Correlational Analysis ................................................................. 213
1. General Description ................................................................... 213
2. Examples ............................................................................. 214
3- The uneasy insight” revisited ......................................................... 217
V. Synepeia analysis. The metatheory....................................................... 218
1. Consequential thinking within a given culture (“Synepeics I”) ....................... 219
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2. “Discovering the other” as the beginning of dual thinking (synepeics II)............... 221
3. Common denominators on a meta-level: comparing modes of thought (“synepeics III”) .... 224
4. Synepeical strategies (“synepeics IV”) ................................................ 228
VI. Synepeia analysis compared with other analyses, and a summary............................ 229
Chapter 7. Biological anthropology in its relation to the anthropology of law .................. 233
I. Relationship between cultural and biological anthropology. Terminology ................... 233
II. Themes ................................................................................... 235
1. A definition of animism. Biological anthropology and DNA research...................... 235
2. Theories of evolution and behavior..................................................... 236
3. Co-evolution. Niches and similarity. The sociobiology debate .......................... 240
III. A four-function theory of biology for law ............................................... 245
1. Constraining Function I ............................................................... 246
2. Constraining function II .............................................................. 249
3. Liberating Function I................................................................... 251
4. Liberating function II ................................................................ 252
IV. Sense of justice ......................................................................... 253
1. Nativism vs. historism ................................................................. 254
2. Meier and Bihler ....................................................................... 256
3. The cognitive component. Manfred Rehbinder ............................................ 256
4. No society without law ......A......................................................... 257
5. No law without the ideal of justice .................................................... 257
6. No human beings without cognitive and emotional abilities............................... 258
7. The sense of justice and the distinction between imposed and internalized law .......... 258
8. More examples for the sense of justice ................................................. 259
9. Aristotelian principles ................................................................ 260
10. Timely justice.......................................................................... 260
11. The Cheyenne Way........................................................................ 261
12. The principles of static and dynamic justice and the sense of justice .................. 262
13. The sense of justice of persons within the legal bureaucracy............................ 262
14. The critical function of the sense of justice .......................................... 262
15. Cultural justice ....................................................................... 263
PART TWO
THE SUBDISCIPLINES OF ANTHROPOLOGY OF LAW
Chapter 8. Kinship patterns, and other anthropological aspects of family and gender law ..... 269
I. Shorthand kin identification ........................................................ 269
II. Concepts of kinship ................................................................. 269
1. Genealogical Table and Pedigree.................................................... 269
2. Two assistance communities: Orientation and procreation. Nuclear and extended family.
Kindred.............................................................................. 269
3. Procreation community .............................................................. 270
4. Descendency (or: tradition, or orientation) communities.......................... 270
5. Lineage ............................................................................ 271
6. Clan ............................................................................... 273
7. Patterns of residence .............................................................. 275
8. Patriarchy and matriarchy. Motherright.............................................. 275
9. Incest ............................................................................. 275
III. The Six Terminological Forms of Family Relationship: Eskimo, Sudanese, Hawaiian, Iroquois,
Crow, and Omaha........................................................................ 276
1. The Eskimo System ................................................................. 277
2. The Sudanese System ............................................................... 278
3. The Hawaiian System ............................................................... 279
4. The Iroquois System................................................................ 280
5. The Crow System .................................................................... 282
6. The Omaha System .................................................................. 283
7. An ethnographic test .............................................................. 284
IV. A comparative summary ............................................................... 284
V. The Impact of polygamy on the family systems. Sororate and levirate .................. 285
VI. The conflict between peace-seeking vs. incest avoidance ............................. 285
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Ch pter 9 Societal order, personhood, and human rights (the anthropology of constitutional
justice) ......................................................................................
J A system of groupings in behavioral science..............................................
1. Populations ...............................*...........*...*..........................
2. Parent-offspring agglomerates ........................................................
3. Sexual bonds ......-..................................................................
4 Interspecies associations .............................................................
5! Non-familiar space-based social bonds ................................................
6. Social groupings ............................................
7. Application to human group? .................................
II. Segmentation .............................*............
1 The concepts of segmentation, societal inertia, and superaddition
2. Big man societies....................................................................
3. Chieftaincies (chiefdoms), kingdoms, and queenships. Characteristics ................
Ill Superaddition, societal order and personhood ..........................................
1. Importance for trust, coherence, and egalitarianism. Lingua franca ..................
2. Role of time for superaddition and organization .....................................
3. Heathen, not Christian. A short history of superaddition ............................
4. Philosophical (ontological and epistemological) (1) and political meanings of
superaddition (2). A definition of superaddition (3). ................................
5. Superaddition and individuality. Risk ...............................................
6. Examples ............................................................................
7. Additional historical and comparative dimensions ....................................
8. Recent applications of superaddition, and instances where it is lacking .............
9. Majority rule and human rights.......................................................
10. Learn ability of superaddition?......................................................
11. Correlates...........................................................................
IV. Liminality. Rites de passages. Probes of courage, skill and endurance. Stratification..
1. Liminal stages ......................................................................
2. Rites de passage ....................................................................
3. Probes of courage, skill and endurance .............................................
4. Stratification.......................................................................
V. Anthropological suggestions for Europe.................................................
1. A cooperative called Europe .........................................................
2. Slavic chiefdom and the Brezhnev Doctrine ...........................................
3. Bipolar and tripolar democracy ......................................................
VI. Anthropological remarks to Islam ......................................................
VII An anthropological lesson for the introduction of democracy to a formerly undemocratic
country ................................................................................
287
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358
367
Chapter 10. Reciprocity, exchange, gifts, contracting, trust (the anthropology of commutative
justice) ............................................................................ 370
L Formalism or substantivism? Two determinisms, the role of empiricism, and a farewell to
Neoclassics.................................................................................. 370
1. The formalist argument ................................................................. 371
2. The substantivist answer ............................................................... 372
3. Two determinisms in conflict .......................................................... 373
4. The role of empiricism ................................................................. 373
5. Where Neoclassic economics fail ..................................................... 375
II. The present mainstream. Markets, property, and competition. Anthropologies of giving thanks
and of corruption ......................................................................... 378
L Fund theory and other fundamentals ...................................................... 380
2. A discussion............................................................................ 381
3. Early trade ............................................................................ 382
4. Economic types and total economies ..................................................... 384
5. Personalized vs. impersonalized trade .................................................. 385
6. Kinds of reciprocity.................................................................... 386
7. Kinds of competition.................................................................. 389
8. Superaddition as prerequisite of the invisible hand .................................... 390
9. Economic correlates? ................................................................... 391
10. Monetary types ......................................................................... 394
11. Economic spheres, Conveyences and conversions .......................................... 395
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12. An anthropology of giving thanks. Corruption .................................................. 397
13. Mainstream economic anthropology............................................................... 398
14. An improved outline ........................................................................... 400
15. The role of antitrust for the rule of law and for economic development ........................ 400
Chapter 11. Possession, ownership, probate; market and non market economies; antitrust;
cultural property and heritage of mankind (the anthropology of distributive justice) .. 404
I. Nature and nurture of property .................................................................. 404
II. Some issues .................................................................................... 405
1. From possession to property? .................................................................. 406
2. Property rights? ............................................................................. 406
3. Property in chattels and in land............................................................... 408
4. Property in body parts, including genes ....................................................... 409
III. Inheritance (probate) law ....................................................................... 409
IV. Environmental law and anthropology. Are animists true guardians? Human stewardship............... 410
V. An anthropology of collective goods. Property in market and non-market economies ................. 412
1. Collective goods defined ...................................................................... 412
2. Kinds of collective goods ..................................................................... 413
3. Market failures?............................................................................... 416
4. Collective goods antitrust? ................................................................... 417
5. Collective goods and allocation theory ........................................................ 418
VI. Protection of belonging to a place (landscapes, city scapes). Homesteading vs. suburban sprawl.
The Hopi-Navajo dispute .......................................................................... 418
VII. Cultural heritage and traditional knowledge (the anthropology of intellectual property) .......... 420
Chapter 12. Torts, crimes, sanctions. Witchcraft and related issues (the anthropology of com-
pensatory or retributive justice) ................................................................. 424
I. Sanctions ....................................................................................... 425
II. Internalization................................................................................... 426
III. Malinowski and Llewellyn Hoebel ............................................................... 427
IV. Shame vs. guilt.................................................................................. 427
V. Tort, contract, or property? .................................................................... 431
VI. Witchcraft and related concepts ................................................................. 432
1. Professionals ................................................................................. 432
2. Knowledge as witchcraft ....................................................................... 433
VII. International criminal law ....................................................................... 434
Chapter 13. Jurisdiction. Procedure and dispute settlement. Conflicts of law (the anthropology
of jurisdictional justice, of procedural justice, and of conflicts justice) ............... 439
I. Introductory remarks ............................................................................ 439
1. Justice and time. Heuristics .................................................................. 439
2. Maxims ........................................................................................ 440
3. Kinds of collisions between legal systems ..................................................... 441
4. The structure of Chapter 13 ................................................................... 443
5. Aspects of justice............................................................................. 444
II. Conflict of jurisdictions ........................................................................ 445
III. Appropriate jurisdiction ........................................................................ 445
1. Person......................................................................................... 446
2. Subject matter ............................................................................... 446
3. Territory ..................................................................................... 447
IV. Conflict of procedural laws...................................................................... 447
V. Substantive laws of procedure.................................................................... 447
VI. Conflict of (material) laws. A critique of lex fori in substantive conflict of laws rules cases . 448
1. General considerations of reasons for conflict-of-laws rules, especially in Indian country ... 448
2. Importance of conflict-of-laws rules........................................................... 453
3. Cultural justice, and intercultural justice ................................................... 455
4. Conflict-of-laws reference and gap-filling references ......................................... 455
5. A historical sketch............................................................................ 456
6. The present state. The limitations theory ..................................................... 457
7. Legislative and judicial jurisdiction ......................................................... 458
8. A discussion of lex fori exclusivity .......................................................... 458
9. Practical applications of conflict-of-laws rules in Indian country, and Canby’s survey ........ 460
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10. Acoma v. Laguna, and Jim v. CIT...............................................
11 Navajo conflict-of-laws rules ..................................................
12 Pre- vs post-decree tools of resolving conflict of laws involving tribal law: the twofold
meaning of comity ...............................................................
13 Conclusion to conflict of laws..................................................
VII Force and law. Feud (Pospisil’s graph). The youth bulge phenomenon .................
VIII Law as (mere) process: A post-modern view..........................................
IX Dispute settlement, general and in Indian country. Mediation. Selected sanctions .
PART THREE
THE LEGAL ANTHROPOLOGY OF ETHNIC GROUPS,
AND APPLIED ANTHROPOLOGY OF LAW
Chapter 14. Native American law.........................................................
I General remarks on the relation of Part Three to Parts One and Two.................
jl federal and state Indian Law = daw for Indians” .................................
1. Nature of Indian law. History ..................................................
2. The sovereignties...............................................................
III. A survey of issues relating to the status of Indian tribes.......................
1. Foundations .......................................-............................
2. A brief timetable of events in Indian law” ....................................
IV. Tribal sovereignty ..............................................................
1. Three fields ...................................................................
2. A presumption? .................................................................
V. Indian tribal law = “law of Indians” .............................................
1. Code and common law ............................................................
2. Indian social norms.............................................................
3. Indian country .................................................................
VI. Dispute settlement institutions ..................................................
1. American judicial system and Indian law.........................................
2. Dispute settlements institutions in Indian country .............................
VII. Indian conflict of laws ...........................................................
VIII. An Indian law checklist...........................................................
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494
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Chapter 15. Ethnic groups. The international law of indigenous peoples. Global human rights ... 497
I. The identification of an ethnic group ........................................... 497
II. Human Relations Area Files (HRAF) ............................................... 498
III. Colonialism. Decolonization ..................................................... 498
IV. The international public law of indigenous peoples. The non-governmental organizations
(NGOs)............................................................................. 499
V. United Nations activities in the area of cultural anthropology.................... 499
1. UN Declarations. Resolutions, Guidelines, Convenants (=Pacts), Codes .......... 500
2. UNESCO ......................................................................... 500
3. UNIDROIT ....................................................................... 501
4. ILO (International Labor Organization) ........................................ 501
5. WIPO (World Intellectual Property Organization) ................................ 501
6. UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade and Development) ................... 502
7. CDB (Convention on Biological Diversity) ....................................... 502
8. UNDP (United Nations Development Program) ...................................... 502
9. ECOSOC (Economic and Social Council of the United Nations Organization) ....... 502
10. IFAD ........................................................................... 503
11. UNPFII ......................................................................... 503
12. UN HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL ........................................................ 503
13. SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR ON THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
(Human Rights Council)........................................................... 503
14. UNITED NATIONS DEVELOPMENT GROUP.......................................... 503
VI. The discussion of worldwide human rights ........................................ 503
Chapter 16. Applied anthropology of law................................................. 506
I. Concept .......................................................................... 506
II. Ethical standards ................................................................ 507
HI. Failures ......................................................................... 508
IV. Theoretical areas ................................................................ 509
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V. Problem areas ..................................
1. Awareness of ethnocentrism ..................
2. European issues..............................
3. Human rights, democratization, and social issues
4. Russian issues...............................
5. Islamic issues ..............................
6. Ecumenical issues............................
7. Tribal issues and issues of legal pluralism .
8. United Nations issues........................
510
510
511
511
512
513
513
513
513
Postscript: The sense of justice resumed.................................................................. 515
Literature ............................................................................................... 517
1. Books, articles, notes and comments............................................................. 517
2. General bibliographies ......................................................................... 534
3. Periodicals (selection) ........................................................................ 534
List of cases ............................................................................................ 536
Subjects and names index.................................................................................. 537
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|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Fikentscher, Wolfgang 1928-2015 |
author_GND | (DE-588)120398265 |
author_facet | Fikentscher, Wolfgang 1928-2015 |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Fikentscher, Wolfgang 1928-2015 |
author_variant | w f wf |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV041396368 |
classification_rvk | PI 5030 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)864543086 (DE-599)DNB1038706769 |
dewey-full | 340 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 340 - Law |
dewey-raw | 340 |
dewey-search | 340 |
dewey-sort | 3340 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | Second edition |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV041396368 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T00:55:47Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783848713196 9781849467896 9783406659072 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-026844030 |
oclc_num | 864543086 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-M382 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-11 DE-384 DE-703 DE-20 DE-945 DE-12 DE-706 |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-M382 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-11 DE-384 DE-703 DE-20 DE-945 DE-12 DE-706 |
physical | XXXII, 547 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme |
publishDate | 2016 |
publishDateSearch | 2016 |
publishDateSort | 2016 |
publisher | C.H. Beck Nomos |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Fikentscher, Wolfgang 1928-2015 Verfasser (DE-588)120398265 aut Law and anthropology by Wolfgang Fikentscher Second edition München C.H. Beck 2016 Baden-Baden Nomos Oxford Hart © 2016 XXXII, 547 Seiten Illustrationen, Diagramme txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Rechtsanthropologie (DE-588)4048754-4 gnd rswk-swf Rechtsanthropologie (DE-588)4048754-4 s DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Augsburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026844030&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Fikentscher, Wolfgang 1928-2015 Law and anthropology Rechtsanthropologie (DE-588)4048754-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4048754-4 |
title | Law and anthropology |
title_auth | Law and anthropology |
title_exact_search | Law and anthropology |
title_full | Law and anthropology by Wolfgang Fikentscher |
title_fullStr | Law and anthropology by Wolfgang Fikentscher |
title_full_unstemmed | Law and anthropology by Wolfgang Fikentscher |
title_short | Law and anthropology |
title_sort | law and anthropology |
topic | Rechtsanthropologie (DE-588)4048754-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Rechtsanthropologie |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=026844030&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT fikentscherwolfgang lawandanthropology |