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Uses of Justice in the Early Modern World

Uses of Justice in the Early Modern World

Manon Van Der Heijden, Griet Vermeesch, Jaco Zuijderduijn

About this book

"[This book] presents a new perspective on the uses of justice between 1600 and 1900 and confronts prevailing Eurocentric historiography in its examination of how people of this period made use of the law. Between 1600 and 1900 the towns in Western Europe, the kingdoms in Eastern Europe, the Empires in Asia and the colonial states in Asia and the Americas were all characterised by a plurality of legal orders resulting from interactions and negotiations between states, institutions, and people with different backgrounds. Through exploring how justice is used within these different areas of the world, this book offers a broad global perspective, but it also adopts a fresh approach through shifting attention away from states and onto how ordinary people lived with and made use of this ‘legal pluralism’. Containing...contextualised case studies and contributing to debates on socio-legal history, processes of state formation from below, access to justice, and legal pluralism, [this book] questions to what degree top-down imposed formal institutions were used and how, and to what degree, bottom-up crafted legal systems were crucial in allowing transactions to happen."--

Details

OL Work ID
OL21352786W

Subjects

Law, historyJustice, administration ofLawHistoryAdministration of JusticeLegal polycentricity

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Open Library
Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.