Results 251 to 260 of about 39,407 (300)

Ignaz Seipel (1876–1932). In the Tension between Church, Party, and Politics

open access: yesJournal on European History of Law
Nadja El Beheiri
doaj  

Roman Law:

open access: yes, 2018
Abstract Roman law has been a system of practice and field of academic study for some 2,400 years. Today, the field enjoys unprecedented diversity in terms of linguistic, disciplinary, and national context. However, the contours of contemporary study are the product of complex and imbricated historical factors: the non-codification by ...
Domingo, Rafael,
core   +5 more sources

Roman Law Among Pandectists and Roman Law Among Romans

Civil Law Review, 2023
This article, written by Professor Riccardo Cardilli, explores the evolution of views on Roman private law. The article delves into the methodological and ideological factors that influenced the recovery of knowledge about ancient Roman law. Special attention is given to the role of Roman sources in the development of pandect law, including doctrinal ...
openaire   +1 more source

CITIZENSHIP IN ROMAN LAW

2021
Europe, and Italy in particular, have been the recipients - in recent years - of intense migratory flows, which have required the attention of the legislator to address the problems arising from the phenomenon in question. An in-depth reflection is therefore required, aimed at reviewing the whole issue of immigration and proposing to verify the ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Roman Law of Blackmail

The Journal of Legal Studies, 2001
Abstract The legal “puzzle” raised by modern blackmail is that although it is lawful to disseminate harmful information about another person, just so long as the information is true, it is unlawful to extort money by making threats to do so. Roman law took a different approach.
openaire   +1 more source

Sources of Roman Law

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2018
This chapter addresses the origin and development of Roman legal sources — that is, the methods and procedures for establishing new legally binding rules, standards, and norms. The source of a legal norm gives it ultimate validity. Legal sources can be classified in many different ways.
openaire   +1 more source

Roman Law

2009
The present understanding of Roman law is by and large based on snippets of texts collected in a 6th-century compilation of legal sources known as the Corpus Iuris Civilis, ordered by the Roman emperor Justinian. These fragments, which were stripped of their original context by the drafters of this project, represent the intellectual pinnacle of Roman ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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