Abstract

Contents: Preface, Joakim Nergelius Introduction, Antonina Bakardjieva Engelbrekt and Joakim Nergelius PART I: COMPARATIVE LAW, LEGAL AID AND DEVELOPMENT 1. Legal Change and Economic Performance: An Assessment, Gianmaria Ajani 2. Legal Cartography and Comparative Law, Per Bergling 3. Development Assistance in the Legal Field: Promotion of Market Economy vs. Human Rights, Michael Bogdan 4. Can Human Rights be Exported? Rethinking the Idea of Human Rights Transplantability, Claudio Corradetti 5. 'Cut-and-Paste'? Rule of Law Promotion and Legal Transplants in War to Peace Transitions, Richard Zajac Sannerholm PART II: COMPARATIVE CONSTITUTIONAL LAW 6. Ontological and Epistemological Complexity in Comparative Constitutional Law, Otto Pfersmann 7. Governmental Accountability in Autonomies: Islands in Comparison With Select Autonomies in Europe and Elsewhere, Markku Suksi 8. The Viability of Constitutional/Non-Constitutional Comparison, Johan Lindholm 9. Comparative Aspects of Fundamental Rights in Germany and Central and Eastern Europe: The Example of Ukraine, Kateryna Karpova PART III: COMPARATIVE AND ECONOMIC LAW 10. Making the Principles of European Contract Law: Theoretical and Methodological Aspects, Ole Lando 11. The Questionable Questionnaire: Reflections on Comparative Law Method in Light of The Principles of European Tort Law, Marten Schultz 12. Legal Services in Conveyancing - A European Comparison, Christoph U. Schmid 13. Constitutionalization of Private Law, Anna Lytvynyuk CONCLUSION 14. Modern Comparative Law - the Forces behind and the Challenges Ahead in the Age of Transnational Harmonisation, Peter-Christian Muller-Graff

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