A global history of ideas in the language of law:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Frankfurt am Main
Max Planck Institute for European Legal History
2021
|
Ausgabe: | first published |
Schriftenreihe: | Global perspectives on legal history
Volume 16 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XI, 309 Seiten 21 cm, 467 g |
ISBN: | 9783944773308 3944773306 |
Internformat
MARC
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100 | 1 | |a Schuppert, Gunnar Folke |d 1943- |e Verfasser |0 (DE-588)108170497 |4 aut | |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a A global history of ideas in the language of law |c Gunnar Folke Schuppert ; translation by Rhodes Barrett |
250 | |a first published | ||
264 | 1 | |a Frankfurt am Main |b Max Planck Institute for European Legal History |c 2021 | |
300 | |a XI, 309 Seiten |c 21 cm, 467 g | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 1 | |a Global perspectives on legal history |v Volume 16 | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Rechtsphilosophie |0 (DE-588)4048821-4 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Ideengeschichte |0 (DE-588)4138031-9 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Rechtssprache |0 (DE-588)4048839-1 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
653 | |a International law as a language of justification | ||
653 | |a Universal Natural Law | ||
653 | |a The language of law as a language of politics | ||
653 | |a The juridical construction of sovereignty | ||
653 | |a History of ideas as a history of languages | ||
653 | |a State semantics and the role of law | ||
653 | |a Justice through the rule of law | ||
653 | |a The constitution as the order of the political | ||
689 | 0 | 0 | |a Rechtssprache |0 (DE-588)4048839-1 |D s |
689 | 0 | 1 | |a Rechtsphilosophie |0 (DE-588)4048821-4 |D s |
689 | 0 | 2 | |a Ideengeschichte |0 (DE-588)4138031-9 |D s |
689 | 0 | |5 DE-604 | |
710 | 2 | |a Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte |b Prof. Dr. Thomas Duve |0 (DE-588)1068106670 |4 pbl | |
830 | 0 | |a Global perspectives on legal history |v Volume 16 |w (DE-604)BV043405445 |9 16 | |
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942 | 1 | 1 | |c 001.09 |e 22/bsb |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804182926202503168 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
WHY
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
IN
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW?
...................
1
A.
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
AS
A
HISTORY
OF LANGUAGES
..........................
1
B.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
RELEVANT
TO
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS:
FIVE
FUNCTIONS
IN
FIVE
CONTEXTS
..............
4
I.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
DISCOURSES
ON
THE
LEGITIMACY
OF
POLITICAL
AUTHORITY
...............................
4
II.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICAL
CHANGE
...
8
III.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
RIGHTS
.............
16
IV.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
JUSTICE
.............
24
V.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
A
NEW
GLOBAL
ORDER
27
C.
IN
CONCLUSION
...............................................................................
31
PART
ONE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
AS
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.........................................
33
INTRODUCTION
.............................................................................................
33
A.
HOW
IDEAS
AND
KNOWLEDGE
TRAVEL:
A
LITTLE
STORY
TO
BEGIN
WITH
33
B.
WHAT
ARE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
AND
THE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS?
..........
37
I.
FIELDS
AND
TOPICS
OF
GLOBAL
HISTORY
......................................
38
II.
KEY
CONCEPTS
AND
FIGURES
OF
THOUGHT
..................................
39
III.
GLOBAL
HISTORY
AS
PERSPECTIVE
..............................................
40
IV.
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
-
THREE
SEARCHLIGHTS
........................
43
CHAPTER
ONE:
WHAT
SORT
OF
IDEAS?
.........................................................
44
A.
A
NARROW
OR
BROAD
CONCEPT
OF
IDEA?
...........................................
44
B.
DO
DISCIPLINES
MATTER?
.................................................................
45
C.
THE
PHENOMENON
OF
CONTACT
ZONES
BETWEEN
DISCIPLINES
..........
49
CHAPTER
TWO:
GLOBAL
INTELLECTUAL
FIELDS
AND
GLOBAL
LEGAL
SPACES
-
WHAT
CONSTITUTES
AN
INTELLECTUAL
FIELD
AND
A
LEGAL
SPACE?
.................
54
A.
GLOBAL
INTELLECTUAL
AND
KNOWLEDGE
FIELDS
AND
LEGAL
SPACES
AS
COMMUNICATION
SPACES
....................................................
54
I.
THE
WORKINGS
AND
FORMS
OF
COMMUNICATION
SPACES
..........
54
II.
PROFESSIONS
AND
THEIR
LANGUAGE
...........................................
57
CONTENTS
V
B.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
DETERRITORIALIZED
COMMUNICATION
ABOUT
LAW
AND
LIFE-DETERMINING
IDEAS
.................................
59
I.
THE
JUS
COMMUNE
AS
COMMUNICATIVELY
GENERATED
AND
DISSEMINATED
UNIVERSALIST
LEGAL
THOUGHT
...............................
59
II.
RELIGIOUS
COMMUNITIES
AS
IMPORTANT
COMMUNICATION
COMMUNITIES
IN
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
....................................
62
CHAPTER
THREE:
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
AND
KNOWLEDGE
AS
ENTANGLED
HISTORY
....................................................................................
71
A.
GLOBALIZATION
HISTORY
AS
ENTANGLED
HISTORY:
THE
NEED
FOR
SYSTEMATIC
ENTANGLEMENT
RESEARCH
................................................
71
B.
COMMUNICATION-INTENSIVE
NETWORKS
AS
A
PRIME
INSTANCE
OF
ENTANGLEMENT
STRUCTURES:
TWO
HISTORICAL
EXAMPLES
.................
75
I.
THE
GELEHRTENREPUBLIK
/
REPUBLIC
OF
LETTERS
/
REPUBLIQUE
DES
LETTRES
AS
COMMUNICATION
NETWORK
..........
77
II.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
A
PROCESS
OF
TRANSNATIONAL
COPRODUCTION
OF
KNOWLEDGE
................................................
79
C.
TWO
TYPES
OF
ENTANGLEMENT
ACTOR
AT
WORK:
STATE
NOMADS
OR
EMPIRE
AGENTS
AND
GO-BETWEENS
IN
A
BROKERED
WORLD
.
.
81
I.
STATE
NOMADS
AND
EMPIRE
AGENTS
.........................................
81
II.
GOVERNMENT
BY
GO-BETWEENS
IN
A
BROKERED
WORLD
............
82
PART
TWO
THREE
KEY
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW
AND
ITS
LANGUAGE
IN
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
........................................................................
85
CHAPTER
ONE:
FIRST
AND
FOREMOST:
THE
ABSTRACTION
AND
TRANSFORMATION
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW
AND
ITS
LANGUAGE
.............................
86
A.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
THE
ABSTRACTION
FUNCTIONS
OF
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
.............................................................................................
86
I.
THE
INVENTION
OF
THE
LEGAL
PERSON
....................................
86
II.
THE
RECEPTION
OF
ROMAN
LAW
AS
ACQUISITION
OF
A
NEW
LANGUAGE
.................................................................
89
B.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
THE
TRANSFORMATION
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW
AND
ITS
LANGUAGE
....................................................................................
91
I.
TRANSFORMATION
OF
POWER
INTO
AUTHORITY:
THE
INVENTION
OF
PUBLIC
OFFICE
.....................................................................
91
II.
LAW
AS
CONGEALED
POLITICS:
THE
TRANSFORMATION
FUNCTION
OF
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
............................................................
93
VI
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
TWO:
THE
INSTITUTIONALIZATION
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
ORDER
AND
CONFLICT
RESOLUTION
95
A.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
ORDER
....................
95
B.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
CONFLICT
RESOLUTION
....
98
I.
POLITICAL
CULTURE
AS
CONFLICT
CULTURE
.............................
98
II.
THE
NEED
FOR
A
MODUS
VIVENDI
AND
MODUS
PROCEDENDI
FOR
NORMATIVE
CONFLICTS
-
FORMULATED
IN
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
100
CHAPTER
THREE;
LAW
AS
A
SPHERE
OF
RESONANCE
......................................
103
A.
WHAT
IS
RESONANCE
AND
WHAT
DOES
THE
ANSWER
TEACH
US
ABOUT
OUR
TOPIC?
..........................................................................
103
B.
TYPES
OF
STATE
AND
THEIR
LAW
.....................................................
105
I.
THE
STATE
OF
INDUSTRIAL
SOCIETY
AND
THE
EXISTENTIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
OF
THE
STATE
AS
ORDERING
IDEA
OF
THE
MODERN
ADMINISTRATIVE
STATE
..................................................
106
II.
THE
PREVENTIVE
STATE
AND
ITS
PREVENTIVE
SECURITY
LAW.
...
110
III.
THE
CONCEPT
AND
WORKINGS
OF
THE
PREVENTIVE
STATE
............
ILL
C.
FROM
THE
PRIVATE
LAW
OF
THE
CONSTITUTION
TO
THE
CONSTITUTION
OF
PRIVATE
LAW:
THE
NECESSARY
CORRESPONDENCE
BETWEEN
THE
CONCEPTUAL
MODELS
OF
JURISPRUDENCE
AND
SOCIAL
AND
ECONOMIC
CONDITIONS
..................................................
114
I.
THE
NECESSARY
CORRESPONDENCE
BETWEEN
LAW
AND
SOCIAL
REALITY
OR
WHY
LEGAL
CONCEPTS
CAN
NOT
ONLY
AGE
BUT
ALSO
LOSE
THEIR
FUNCTION
..................................................
114
II.
FROM
PRIVATE
LAW
AS
CONSTITUTION
TO
THE
CONSTITUTION
OF
PRIVATE
LAW
........................................................................
116
D.
THE
MULTIPLE
LIFE
WORLDS
OF
THE
LAW:
THE
HELPFUL
PERSPECTIVE
OF
LEGAL
PLURALISM
..........................................................................
118
I.
THE
SOCIETIES
OF
LAW
..............................................................
118
II.
COMMUNITIES
OF
LAW
AND
THEIR
SPECIFIC
WORLD-VIEWS
..........
119
PART
THREE
LEGAL
CONCEPTS
AND
LEGAL
REGIMES
IN
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
....
123
CHAPTER
ONE:
WORLDWIDE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AND
UNIVERSAL
NATURAL
LAW
124
A.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
GLOBAL
HISTORY
.........................................
124
B.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
A
HISTORY
OF
INSTITUTIONS
........................
126
I.
FUNCTIONAL
DIVERSITY
OF
THE
TYPICAL
ENLIGHTENMENT
INSTITUTION
UNIVERSITY
.....................................................
127
CONTENTS
|
VII
IL
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
JURISPRUDENCE
AS
INCREASINGLY
IMPORTANT
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
IN
THE
EARLY
MODERN
PRINCIPALITY
....
129
C.
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
THE
HISTORY
OF
POWER
......................................
131
D.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
LEGAL
HISTORY:
THE
EPOCHAL
IMPORTANCE
OF
NATURAL
LAW
...............................................................................
133
I.
WHAT
EXACTLY
IS
NATURAL
LAW?
................................................
133
II.
THE
MULTIFUNCTIONALITY
AND
TWO
FACES
OF
NATURAL
LAW
....
135
III.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
NATURAL
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
...
138
IV.
NATURAL
LAW
AS
A
PHENOMENON
CONCOMITANT
WITH
GLOBALIZATION?
.................................................................
143
CHAPTER
TWO:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
.............................................................................
145
A.
SOME
PARTICULARITIES
OF
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
....
145
I.
THE
KEY
ROLE
OF
LANGUAGE
IN
A
LEGAL
REGIME
BETWEEN
IDEAS
AND
FACTS
........................................................................
145
II.
THE
IMPORTANCE
AND
FUNCTION
OF
SEMANTIC
SHIFTS
IN
THE
FIELD
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
................................................
148
III.
POWER
POLITICS
AS
SEMANTIC
IMPERIALISM
..........................
150
B.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
JUSTIFICATION.
153
I.
THE
HISTORY
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
AS
A
HISTORY
OF
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
.....................................................
153
II.
THE
FUNCTION
OF
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
...............................
156
III.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
IN
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
157
IV.
THE
STRUGGLE
FOR
COMMAND
OF
THE
SEA
IN
THE
GUISE
OF
COMPETITION
BETWEEN
SECTIONAL
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES.
.
162
V.
DOMINION
OVER
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
AS
TRULY
HEGEMONIC
POWER
.................................................................
170
C.
THE
HISTORY
OF
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
AS
A
HISTORY
OF
JURIDIFICATION
171
I.
FOUR
STAGES
IN
THE
JURIDIFICATION
OF
INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS.
.
171
II.
FROM
WAR
AND
PEACE
TO
COOPERATION
ON
QUESTIONS
OF
POLITICAL
ORDER
...................................................................
173
CHAPTER
THREE:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
............................................................................
176
A.
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AS
THE
POLITICAL
CREED
OF
MODERNITY
...................
176
B.
THE
IDEA
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AT
THE
INTERFACE
BETWEEN
ETHICS,
POLITICS,
AND
LAW
..............................................................
177
VIII
|
CONTENTS
I.
THE
LIFE
OF
THE
HUMAN
RIGHTS
CONCEPT
IN
OVERLAPPING
NORMATIVE
WORLDS
.................................................................
177
II.
THE
STANDARD-SETTING
FORCE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
......................
182
C.
THE
IDEA
AND
HISTORY
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
REFLECTED
IN
THREE
MAJOR
NARRATIVES
............................................................
184
I.
THE
NARRATIVE
OF
PAUL
GORDON
LAUREN:
THE
TRIAD
OF
VISIONS,
VISIONARIES,
AND
DRAMATIC
EVENTS
....
184
II.
THE
NARRATIVE
OF
LYNN
HUNT:
READING
NOVELS
AND
DECLARING
RIGHTS
.....................................................................
186
III.
THE
NARRATIVE
OF
SAMUEL
MOYN:
A
POLITICAL
HISTORY
OF
THE
RECEPTION
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
......................................
189
IV.
WHAT
THE
THREE
NARRATIVES
TEACH
US
......................................
192
D.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
AT
WORK
........................................................................
194
I.
THE
MYTH
OF
A
PURE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
...............................
194
II.
TWO
NOTABLE
CONTEXTS
OF
APPLICATION
FOR
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
...................................................................
195
CHAPTER
FOUR:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
AS
AN
INTEGRAL
PART
OF
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
THE
POLITICAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
........................
200
A.
LEGITIMATE
AUTHORITY:
AUTHORITY
BASED
ON
AND
LIMITED
BY
LAW
...........................................................................................
201
I.
THE
DIALECTICAL
RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN
POWER
AND
LAW:
LAW
AS
THE
BASIS
AND
LIMITATION
OF
POWER
.............................
201
II.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
THE
RULE-OF-LAW
CONSTITUTION
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
RULES
AND
PROCEDURES
....................................
203
B.
THE
STATE:
THE
ORGANIZED
UNITY
OF
DECISION-MAKING
AND
ACTION.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
ORGANIZATIONAL
AND
PROCEDURAL
LAW
.................
204
I.
STATEHOOD
REQUIRES
ORGANIZATION
.........................................
204
II.
ORGANIZATIONAL
AND
PROCEDURAL
LAW
AS
MANIFESTATIONS
OF
LAW
RELEVANT
TO
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS:
TWO
EXAMPLES
....
207
C.
JUSTICE
THROUGH
THE
RULE
OF
LAW?
THE
IDEA
OF
INSTITUTIONAL
JUSTICE
210
I.
BUON
GOVERNO
E
GIUSTIZIA
....................................................
210
II.
THE
IDEA
OF
INSTITUTIONAL
JUSTICE
...........................................
211
III.
THE
JUSTICE
GENES
OF
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
....................................
213
D.
HOW
MUCH
RULE
OF
LAW
IS
THERE
IN
GOOD
GOVERNANCE?
..............
215
E.
RULE
OF
LAW
PROMOTION
AND
RULE
OF
LAW
CONTROL
AS
POLICY
INSTRUMENTS
...................................................................
219
CONTENTS
IX
I.
PANACEA:
THE
RULE
OF
LAW?
.....................................................
219
II.
THE
NEW
EU
FRAMEWORK
TO
STRENGTHEN
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
.
.
220
PART
FOUR
THE
ROLE
OF
KEY
LEGAL
CONCEPTS
IN
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
............
223
CHAPTER
ONE:
STATE
AUTHORITY
.................................................................
224
A.
FUNCTIONS
OF
THE
STATE
AND
THE
ROLE
OF
LAW
...............................
225
B.
THE
STATE
AS
A
FORM
OF
AUTHORITY
AND
THE
ROLE
OF
LAW
..............
227
C.
STATE
SEMANTICS
AND
THE
ROLE
OF
LAW
...........................................
230
I.
JURISTS
AS
STRONGLY
COMMITTED
TRUSTEES
OF
THE
CONCEPT
OF
STATE
230
II.
THE
METEORIC
CAREER
OF
THE
STATE
CONCEPT
IN
THE
GUISE
OF
THE
REASON
OF
STATE
.........................................................
233
III.
A
REMARKABLE
SEMANTIC
SHIFT:
FROM
STATE
TO
STATEHOOD
....
235
CHAPTER
TWO:
SOVEREIGNTY
........................................................................
238
A.
THE
TRIAD
OF
STATE,
REASON
OF
STATE,
AND
SOVEREIGNTY
AS
BASIC
CHORD
OF
THE
MODERN
STATE
.............................................
238
B.
SOVEREIGNTY
-
LEGAL
CONCEPT,
POLITICAL
CONCEPT,
OR
BOTH?
..........
239
C.
THE
POLITICAL
DIMENSION
OF
THE
SOVEREIGNTY
CONCEPT
.................
241
D.
THE
JURIDICAL
CONSTRUCTION
OF
SOVEREIGN
STATE
AUTHORITY
............
243
E.
ON
BALANCE
....................................................................................
245
CHAPTER
THREE:
CONSTITUTION
...................................................................
246
A.
THE
CONSTITUTION
AS
AN
INSTITUTION
BETWEEN
THE
POLITICIZATION
OF
LAW
AND
THE
JURIDIFICATION
OF
POLITICS
....................................
246
B.
THE
CONSTITUTION
AS
THE
ORDER
OF
THE
POLITICAL
..........................
247
C.
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
AS
POLITICAL
LAW
.............................................
249
D.
THE
CONSTITUTION
AS
KEY
ELEMENT
OF
A
POLITY
S
POLITICAL
CULTURE
.
.
250
E.
CONSTRUCTION
PLAN
AND
KEY
JURISTIC
ELEMENTS
OF
THE
INSTITUTION
CONSTITUTION
..................................................
252
F.
HOW
CONSTITUTIONS
COME
ABOUT
..................................................
254
CHAPTER
FOUR:
CONTRACT
..........................................................................
258
A.
THE
CONTRACT
AS
A
TOOL
FOR
PRODUCING
BINDING
FORCE
.................
258
B.
THE
CONTRACT
AS
A
POWER
AND
JUSTICE
PROBLEM
..........................
261
I.
CONTRACTS
AS
A
POWER
PROBLEM:
THE
DOUBLE
TASK
OF
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
................................................................
261
II.
CONTRACTS
AS
A
JUSTICE
PROBLEM:
THE
CONTRACT
LAW
LITERATURE
OF
16TH
CENTURY
MORAL
THEOLOGY
...........................................
263
III.
CONTRACT
THEORIES
AS
PROCEDURALIST
JUSTIFICATION
THEORIES
.
.
265
X
CONTENTS
CONCLUDING
OBSERVATIONS
AND
REMARKS
................................................
269
A.
THE
STATIZATION
OF
THE
WORLD
.......................................................
270
B.
FOUR
MORE
OR
LESS
SUCCESSFUL
TRIUMPHS
UNDER
THE
BANNER
OF
LAW
270
I.
THE
TRIUMPH
OF
NATURAL
LAW
.............................................
270
II.
THE
TRIUMPH
OF
THE
CONSTITUTIONAL
IDEA
AND
THE
STALLING
TRIUMPH
OF
THE
IDEA
OF
CONSTITUTIONAL
JURISDICTION
...
271
III.
THE
TRIUMPH
OF
THE
IDEA
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
........................
271
IV.
THE
TRIUMPH
OF
THE
IDEA
OF
GLOBAL
VALIDITY
FOR
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
.....................................................................
272
C.
THREE
KEY
CONCEPTS
FROM
THE
WORLD
OF
LAW
INTRINSIC
TO
THE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
................................................................
272
I.
SOVEREIGNTY
............................................................................
272
II.
CONTRACT
.................................................................................
273
III.
PROPERTY
.................................................................................
273
D.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICAL
AUTHORITY
.
.
.
274
BIBLIOGRAPHY
.............................................................................................
277
ABOUT
THE
AUTHOR
....................................................................................
309
CONTENTS
XI
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
WHY
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
IN
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW?
.
1
A.
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
AS
A
HISTORY
OF LANGUAGES
.
1
B.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
RELEVANT
TO
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS:
FIVE
FUNCTIONS
IN
FIVE
CONTEXTS
.
4
I.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
DISCOURSES
ON
THE
LEGITIMACY
OF
POLITICAL
AUTHORITY
.
4
II.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICAL
CHANGE
.
8
III.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
RIGHTS
.
16
IV.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
JUSTICE
.
24
V.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
A
NEW
GLOBAL
ORDER
27
C.
IN
CONCLUSION
.
31
PART
ONE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
AS
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
33
INTRODUCTION
.
33
A.
HOW
IDEAS
AND
KNOWLEDGE
TRAVEL:
A
LITTLE
STORY
TO
BEGIN
WITH
33
B.
WHAT
ARE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
AND
THE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS?
.
37
I.
FIELDS
AND
TOPICS
OF
GLOBAL
HISTORY
.
38
II.
KEY
CONCEPTS
AND
FIGURES
OF
THOUGHT
.
39
III.
GLOBAL
HISTORY
AS
PERSPECTIVE
.
40
IV.
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
-
THREE
SEARCHLIGHTS
.
43
CHAPTER
ONE:
WHAT
SORT
OF
IDEAS?
.
44
A.
A
NARROW
OR
BROAD
CONCEPT
OF
IDEA?
.
44
B.
DO
DISCIPLINES
MATTER?
.
45
C.
THE
PHENOMENON
OF
CONTACT
ZONES
BETWEEN
DISCIPLINES
.
49
CHAPTER
TWO:
GLOBAL
INTELLECTUAL
FIELDS
AND
GLOBAL
LEGAL
SPACES
-
WHAT
CONSTITUTES
AN
INTELLECTUAL
FIELD
AND
A
LEGAL
SPACE?
.
54
A.
GLOBAL
INTELLECTUAL
AND
KNOWLEDGE
FIELDS
AND
LEGAL
SPACES
AS
COMMUNICATION
SPACES
.
54
I.
THE
WORKINGS
AND
FORMS
OF
COMMUNICATION
SPACES
.
54
II.
PROFESSIONS
AND
THEIR
LANGUAGE
.
57
CONTENTS
V
B.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
DETERRITORIALIZED
COMMUNICATION
ABOUT
LAW
AND
LIFE-DETERMINING
IDEAS
.
59
I.
THE
"
JUS
COMMUNE
"
AS
COMMUNICATIVELY
GENERATED
AND
DISSEMINATED
UNIVERSALIST
LEGAL
THOUGHT
.
59
II.
RELIGIOUS
COMMUNITIES
AS
IMPORTANT
COMMUNICATION
COMMUNITIES
IN
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
62
CHAPTER
THREE:
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
AND
KNOWLEDGE
AS
ENTANGLED
HISTORY
.
71
A.
GLOBALIZATION
HISTORY
AS
ENTANGLED
HISTORY:
THE
NEED
FOR
SYSTEMATIC
ENTANGLEMENT
RESEARCH
.
71
B.
COMMUNICATION-INTENSIVE
NETWORKS
AS
A
PRIME
INSTANCE
OF
ENTANGLEMENT
STRUCTURES:
TWO
HISTORICAL
EXAMPLES
.
75
I.
THE
GELEHRTENREPUBLIK
/
REPUBLIC
OF
LETTERS
/
REPUBLIQUE
DES
LETTRES
AS
COMMUNICATION
NETWORK
.
77
II.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
A
PROCESS
OF
TRANSNATIONAL
COPRODUCTION
OF
KNOWLEDGE
.
79
C.
TWO
TYPES
OF
ENTANGLEMENT
ACTOR
AT
WORK:
"
STATE
NOMADS
"
OR
"
EMPIRE
AGENTS
"
AND
"
GO-BETWEENS
IN
A
BROKERED
WORLD
"
.
.
81
I.
STATE
NOMADS
AND
EMPIRE
AGENTS
.
81
II.
GOVERNMENT
BY
GO-BETWEENS
IN
A
BROKERED
WORLD
.
82
PART
TWO
THREE
KEY
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW
AND
ITS
LANGUAGE
IN
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
85
CHAPTER
ONE:
FIRST
AND
FOREMOST:
THE
ABSTRACTION
AND
TRANSFORMATION
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW
AND
ITS
LANGUAGE
.
86
A.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
THE
ABSTRACTION
FUNCTIONS
OF
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
.
86
I.
THE
"
INVENTION
"
OF
THE
LEGAL
PERSON
.
86
II.
THE
RECEPTION
OF
ROMAN
LAW
AS
ACQUISITION
OF
A
NEW
LANGUAGE
.
89
B.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
THE
TRANSFORMATION
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW
AND
ITS
LANGUAGE
.
91
I.
TRANSFORMATION
OF
POWER
INTO
AUTHORITY:
THE
"
INVENTION
"
OF
PUBLIC
OFFICE
.
91
II.
LAW
AS
CONGEALED
POLITICS:
THE
TRANSFORMATION
FUNCTION
OF
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
.
93
VI
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
TWO:
THE
INSTITUTIONALIZATION
FUNCTIONS
OF
LAW:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
ORDER
AND
CONFLICT
RESOLUTION
95
A.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
ORDER
.
95
B.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
CONFLICT
RESOLUTION
.
98
I.
POLITICAL
CULTURE
AS
CONFLICT
CULTURE
.
98
II.
THE
NEED
FOR
A
"
MODUS
VIVENDI
"
AND
"
MODUS
PROCEDENDI
"
FOR
NORMATIVE
CONFLICTS
-
FORMULATED
IN
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
100
CHAPTER
THREE;
LAW
AS
A
SPHERE
OF
RESONANCE
.
103
A.
WHAT
IS
RESONANCE
AND
WHAT
DOES
THE
ANSWER
TEACH
US
ABOUT
OUR
TOPIC?
.
103
B.
TYPES
OF
STATE
AND
"
THEIR
"
LAW
.
105
I.
THE
STATE
OF
INDUSTRIAL
SOCIETY
AND
THE
EXISTENTIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
OF
THE
STATE
AS
ORDERING
IDEA
OF
THE
MODERN
ADMINISTRATIVE
STATE
.
106
II.
THE
PREVENTIVE
STATE
AND
"
ITS
"
PREVENTIVE
SECURITY
LAW.
.
110
III.
THE
CONCEPT
AND
WORKINGS
OF
THE
PREVENTIVE
STATE
.
ILL
C.
FROM
THE
PRIVATE
LAW
OF
THE
CONSTITUTION
TO
THE
CONSTITUTION
OF
PRIVATE
LAW:
THE
NECESSARY
CORRESPONDENCE
BETWEEN
THE
CONCEPTUAL
MODELS
OF
JURISPRUDENCE
AND
SOCIAL
AND
ECONOMIC
CONDITIONS
.
114
I.
THE
NECESSARY
CORRESPONDENCE
BETWEEN
LAW
AND
SOCIAL
REALITY
OR
WHY
LEGAL
CONCEPTS
CAN
NOT
ONLY
AGE
BUT
ALSO
LOSE
THEIR
FUNCTION
.
114
II.
FROM
PRIVATE
LAW
AS
CONSTITUTION
TO
THE
CONSTITUTION
OF
PRIVATE
LAW
.
116
D.
THE
MULTIPLE
LIFE
WORLDS
OF
THE
LAW:
THE
HELPFUL
PERSPECTIVE
OF
LEGAL
PLURALISM
.
118
I.
THE
SOCIETIES
OF
LAW
.
118
II.
COMMUNITIES
OF
LAW
AND
THEIR
SPECIFIC
WORLD-VIEWS
.
119
PART
THREE
LEGAL
CONCEPTS
AND
LEGAL
REGIMES
IN
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
123
CHAPTER
ONE:
WORLDWIDE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AND
UNIVERSAL
NATURAL
LAW
124
A.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
GLOBAL
HISTORY
.
124
B.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
A
HISTORY
OF
INSTITUTIONS
.
126
I.
FUNCTIONAL
DIVERSITY
OF
THE
TYPICAL
ENLIGHTENMENT
INSTITUTION
UNIVERSITY
.
127
CONTENTS
|
VII
IL
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
JURISPRUDENCE
AS
INCREASINGLY
IMPORTANT
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
IN
THE
EARLY
MODERN
PRINCIPALITY
.
129
C.
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
THE
HISTORY
OF
POWER
.
131
D.
THE
ENLIGHTENMENT
AS
LEGAL
HISTORY:
THE
EPOCHAL
IMPORTANCE
OF
NATURAL
LAW
.
133
I.
WHAT
EXACTLY
IS
NATURAL
LAW?
.
133
II.
THE
MULTIFUNCTIONALITY
AND
TWO
FACES
OF
NATURAL
LAW
.
135
III.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
NATURAL
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
.
138
IV.
NATURAL
LAW
AS
A
PHENOMENON
CONCOMITANT
WITH
GLOBALIZATION?
.
143
CHAPTER
TWO:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
.
145
A.
SOME
PARTICULARITIES
OF
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
.
145
I.
THE
KEY
ROLE
OF
LANGUAGE
IN
A
LEGAL
REGIME
BETWEEN
IDEAS
AND
FACTS
.
145
II.
THE
IMPORTANCE
AND
FUNCTION
OF
"
SEMANTIC
SHIFTS
"
IN
THE
FIELD
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
.
148
III.
POWER
POLITICS
AS
"
SEMANTIC
IMPERIALISM
"
.
150
B.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
JUSTIFICATION.
153
I.
THE
HISTORY
OF
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
AS
A
HISTORY
OF
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
.
153
II.
THE
FUNCTION
OF
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
.
156
III.
TWO
EXAMPLES
OF
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
IN
INTERNATIONAL
LAW
157
IV.
THE
STRUGGLE
FOR
COMMAND
OF
THE
SEA
IN
THE
GUISE
OF
COMPETITION
BETWEEN
SECTIONAL
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES.
.
162
V.
DOMINION
OVER
JUSTIFICATORY
NARRATIVES
AS
TRULY
HEGEMONIC
POWER
.
170
C.
THE
HISTORY
OF
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
AS
A
HISTORY
OF
JURIDIFICATION
171
I.
FOUR
STAGES
IN
THE
JURIDIFICATION
OF
INTERNATIONAL
POLITICS.
.
171
II.
FROM
WAR
AND
PEACE
TO
COOPERATION
ON
QUESTIONS
OF
POLITICAL
ORDER
.
173
CHAPTER
THREE:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
.
176
A.
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AS
THE
POLITICAL
CREED
OF
MODERNITY
.
176
B.
THE
IDEA
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AT
THE
INTERFACE
BETWEEN
ETHICS,
POLITICS,
AND
LAW
.
177
VIII
|
CONTENTS
I.
THE
LIFE
OF
THE
HUMAN
RIGHTS
CONCEPT
IN
OVERLAPPING
NORMATIVE
WORLDS
.
177
II.
THE
STANDARD-SETTING
FORCE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
.
182
C.
THE
IDEA
AND
HISTORY
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
REFLECTED
IN
THREE
MAJOR
NARRATIVES
.
184
I.
THE
NARRATIVE
OF
PAUL
GORDON
LAUREN:
THE
TRIAD
OF
VISIONS,
VISIONARIES,
AND
DRAMATIC
EVENTS
.
184
II.
THE
NARRATIVE
OF
LYNN
HUNT:
READING
NOVELS
AND
DECLARING
RIGHTS
.
186
III.
THE
NARRATIVE
OF
SAMUEL
MOYN:
A
POLITICAL
HISTORY
OF
THE
RECEPTION
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
.
189
IV.
WHAT
THE
THREE
NARRATIVES
TEACH
US
.
192
D.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICS
AT
WORK
.
194
I.
THE
MYTH
OF
A
"
PURE
"
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
194
II.
TWO
NOTABLE
CONTEXTS
OF
APPLICATION
FOR
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
.
195
CHAPTER
FOUR:
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
AS
AN
INTEGRAL
PART
OF
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
THE
POLITICAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
200
A.
LEGITIMATE
AUTHORITY:
AUTHORITY
BASED
ON
AND
LIMITED
BY
LAW
.
201
I.
THE
DIALECTICAL
RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN
POWER
AND
LAW:
LAW
AS
THE
BASIS
AND
LIMITATION
OF
POWER
.
201
II.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
THE
RULE-OF-LAW
CONSTITUTION
AS
A
LANGUAGE
OF
RULES
AND
PROCEDURES
.
203
B.
THE
STATE:
THE
ORGANIZED
UNITY
OF
DECISION-MAKING
AND
ACTION.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
ORGANIZATIONAL
AND
PROCEDURAL
LAW
.
204
I.
STATEHOOD
REQUIRES
ORGANIZATION
.
204
II.
ORGANIZATIONAL
AND
PROCEDURAL
LAW
AS
MANIFESTATIONS
OF
LAW
RELEVANT
TO
THE
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS:
TWO
EXAMPLES
.
207
C.
JUSTICE
THROUGH
THE
RULE
OF
LAW?
THE
IDEA
OF
INSTITUTIONAL
JUSTICE
210
I.
BUON
GOVERNO
E
GIUSTIZIA
.
210
II.
THE
IDEA
OF
INSTITUTIONAL
JUSTICE
.
211
III.
THE
JUSTICE
GENES
OF
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
.
213
D.
HOW
MUCH
RULE
OF
LAW
IS
THERE
IN
GOOD
GOVERNANCE?
.
215
E.
RULE
OF
LAW
PROMOTION
AND
RULE
OF
LAW
CONTROL
AS
POLICY
INSTRUMENTS
.
219
CONTENTS
IX
I.
PANACEA:
THE
RULE
OF
LAW?
.
219
II.
THE
NEW
EU
FRAMEWORK
TO
STRENGTHEN
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
.
.
220
PART
FOUR
THE
ROLE
OF
KEY
LEGAL
CONCEPTS
IN
A
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
223
CHAPTER
ONE:
STATE
AUTHORITY
.
224
A.
FUNCTIONS
OF
THE
STATE
AND
THE
ROLE
OF
LAW
.
225
B.
THE
STATE
AS
A
FORM
OF
AUTHORITY
AND
THE
ROLE
OF
LAW
.
227
C.
STATE
SEMANTICS
AND
THE
ROLE
OF
LAW
.
230
I.
JURISTS
AS
STRONGLY
COMMITTED
TRUSTEES
OF
THE
CONCEPT
OF
STATE
230
II.
THE
METEORIC
CAREER
OF
THE
STATE
CONCEPT
IN
THE
GUISE
OF
THE
"
REASON
OF
STATE
"
.
233
III.
A
REMARKABLE
SEMANTIC
SHIFT:
FROM
STATE
TO
STATEHOOD
.
235
CHAPTER
TWO:
SOVEREIGNTY
.
238
A.
THE
TRIAD
OF
STATE,
REASON
OF
STATE,
AND
SOVEREIGNTY
AS
BASIC
CHORD
OF
THE
MODERN
STATE
.
238
B.
SOVEREIGNTY
-
LEGAL
CONCEPT,
POLITICAL
CONCEPT,
OR
BOTH?
.
239
C.
THE
POLITICAL
DIMENSION
OF
THE
SOVEREIGNTY
CONCEPT
.
241
D.
THE
JURIDICAL
CONSTRUCTION
OF
SOVEREIGN
STATE
AUTHORITY
.
243
E.
ON
BALANCE
.
245
CHAPTER
THREE:
CONSTITUTION
.
246
A.
THE
CONSTITUTION
AS
AN
INSTITUTION
BETWEEN
THE
POLITICIZATION
OF
LAW
AND
THE
JURIDIFICATION
OF
POLITICS
.
246
B.
THE
CONSTITUTION
AS
THE
ORDER
OF
THE
POLITICAL
.
247
C.
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
AS
POLITICAL
LAW
.
249
D.
THE
CONSTITUTION
AS
KEY
ELEMENT
OF
A
POLITY
'
S
POLITICAL
CULTURE
.
.
250
E.
CONSTRUCTION
PLAN
AND
KEY
JURISTIC
ELEMENTS
OF
THE
INSTITUTION
"
CONSTITUTION
"
.
252
F.
HOW
CONSTITUTIONS
COME
ABOUT
.
254
CHAPTER
FOUR:
CONTRACT
.
258
A.
THE
CONTRACT
AS
A
TOOL
FOR
PRODUCING
BINDING
FORCE
.
258
B.
THE
CONTRACT
AS
A
POWER
AND
JUSTICE
PROBLEM
.
261
I.
CONTRACTS
AS
A
POWER
PROBLEM:
THE
DOUBLE
TASK
OF
CONSTITUTIONAL
LAW
.
261
II.
CONTRACTS
AS
A
JUSTICE
PROBLEM:
THE
CONTRACT
LAW
LITERATURE
OF
16TH
CENTURY
MORAL
THEOLOGY
.
263
III.
CONTRACT
THEORIES
AS
PROCEDURALIST
JUSTIFICATION
THEORIES
.
.
265
X
CONTENTS
CONCLUDING
OBSERVATIONS
AND
REMARKS
.
269
A.
THE
STATIZATION
OF
THE
WORLD
.
270
B.
FOUR
MORE
OR
LESS
SUCCESSFUL
"
TRIUMPHS
"
UNDER
THE
BANNER
OF
LAW
270
I.
THE
"
TRIUMPH
"
OF
NATURAL
LAW
.
270
II.
THE
"
TRIUMPH
"
OF
THE
CONSTITUTIONAL
IDEA
AND
THE
STALLING
TRIUMPH
OF
THE
IDEA
OF
CONSTITUTIONAL
JURISDICTION
.
271
III.
THE
"
TRIUMPH
"
OF
THE
IDEA
OF
HUMAN
RIGHTS
.
271
IV.
THE
"
TRIUMPH
"
OF
THE
IDEA
OF
GLOBAL
VALIDITY
FOR
THE
RULE
OF
LAW
.
272
C.
THREE
KEY
CONCEPTS
FROM
THE
WORLD
OF
LAW
INTRINSIC
TO
THE
GLOBAL
HISTORY
OF
IDEAS
.
272
I.
SOVEREIGNTY
.
272
II.
CONTRACT
.
273
III.
PROPERTY
.
273
D.
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
LAW
AS
THE
LANGUAGE
OF
POLITICAL
AUTHORITY
.
.
.
274
BIBLIOGRAPHY
.
277
ABOUT
THE
AUTHOR
.
309
CONTENTS
XI |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Schuppert, Gunnar Folke 1943- |
author_GND | (DE-588)108170497 |
author_facet | Schuppert, Gunnar Folke 1943- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Schuppert, Gunnar Folke 1943- |
author_variant | g f s gf gfs |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV047576382 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)1262016821 (DE-599)DNB1227636067 |
edition | first published |
format | Book |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T18:32:07Z |
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institution | BVB |
institution_GND | (DE-588)1068106670 |
isbn | 9783944773308 3944773306 |
language | English |
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oclc_num | 1262016821 |
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owner | DE-12 |
owner_facet | DE-12 |
physical | XI, 309 Seiten 21 cm, 467 g |
psigel | BSB_NED_20211109 |
publishDate | 2021 |
publishDateSearch | 2021 |
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publisher | Max Planck Institute for European Legal History |
record_format | marc |
series | Global perspectives on legal history |
series2 | Global perspectives on legal history |
spelling | Schuppert, Gunnar Folke 1943- Verfasser (DE-588)108170497 aut A global history of ideas in the language of law Gunnar Folke Schuppert ; translation by Rhodes Barrett first published Frankfurt am Main Max Planck Institute for European Legal History 2021 XI, 309 Seiten 21 cm, 467 g txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Global perspectives on legal history Volume 16 Rechtsphilosophie (DE-588)4048821-4 gnd rswk-swf Ideengeschichte (DE-588)4138031-9 gnd rswk-swf Rechtssprache (DE-588)4048839-1 gnd rswk-swf International law as a language of justification Universal Natural Law The language of law as a language of politics The juridical construction of sovereignty History of ideas as a history of languages State semantics and the role of law Justice through the rule of law The constitution as the order of the political Rechtssprache (DE-588)4048839-1 s Rechtsphilosophie (DE-588)4048821-4 s Ideengeschichte (DE-588)4138031-9 s DE-604 Max-Planck-Institut für Europäische Rechtsgeschichte Prof. Dr. Thomas Duve (DE-588)1068106670 pbl Global perspectives on legal history Volume 16 (DE-604)BV043405445 16 B:DE-101 application/pdf https://d-nb.info/1227636067/04 Inhaltsverzeichnis DNB Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032961866&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p dnb 20210719 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#dnb |
spellingShingle | Schuppert, Gunnar Folke 1943- A global history of ideas in the language of law Global perspectives on legal history Rechtsphilosophie (DE-588)4048821-4 gnd Ideengeschichte (DE-588)4138031-9 gnd Rechtssprache (DE-588)4048839-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4048821-4 (DE-588)4138031-9 (DE-588)4048839-1 |
title | A global history of ideas in the language of law |
title_auth | A global history of ideas in the language of law |
title_exact_search | A global history of ideas in the language of law |
title_exact_search_txtP | A global history of ideas in the language of law |
title_full | A global history of ideas in the language of law Gunnar Folke Schuppert ; translation by Rhodes Barrett |
title_fullStr | A global history of ideas in the language of law Gunnar Folke Schuppert ; translation by Rhodes Barrett |
title_full_unstemmed | A global history of ideas in the language of law Gunnar Folke Schuppert ; translation by Rhodes Barrett |
title_short | A global history of ideas in the language of law |
title_sort | a global history of ideas in the language of law |
topic | Rechtsphilosophie (DE-588)4048821-4 gnd Ideengeschichte (DE-588)4138031-9 gnd Rechtssprache (DE-588)4048839-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Rechtsphilosophie Ideengeschichte Rechtssprache |
url | https://d-nb.info/1227636067/04 http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=032961866&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV043405445 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT schuppertgunnarfolke aglobalhistoryofideasinthelanguageoflaw AT maxplanckinstitutfureuropaischerechtsgeschichteprofdrthomasduve aglobalhistoryofideasinthelanguageoflaw |
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Inhaltsverzeichnis