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Roman Law And Comparative Law »

Book cover image of Roman Law And Comparative Law by Alan Watson

Authors: Alan Watson
ISBN-13: 9780820312613, ISBN-10: 0820312614
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Date Published: April 1991
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Alan Watson

Alan Watson, Distinguished Research Professor and Ernest P. Rogers Chair at the University of Georgia School of Law, is regarded as one of the world’s foremost authorities on Roman law, comparative law, legal history, and law and religion. He is the author of numerous books, including The State, Law, and Religion: Pagan Rome and Roman Law and Comparative Law (both Georgia). He is also the editor of the four-volume translation of the Digest of Justinian.

Book Synopsis

To understand how law develops and how legal rules and structures relate to society, one must examine the issues both comparatively and historically, Alan Watson asserts. And in the Western world, he adds, in order to understand law comparatively, one must have knowledge of Roman law.

As his title suggests, Watson has divided the book into two related but independent parts. The first part, a revised and enlarged version of his 1970 volume The Law of the Ancient Romans, provides a comprehensive description of the system of Roman law. Watson begins with a discussion of law and the Roman mind and proceeds to such topics as slavery, property, contracts, delicts, and succession. In part two he argues that comparative law--an area of study still in its infancy--can help us "to identify the circumstances in which law changes, thereby uncovering the causes of legal development."

Guided by this purpose, Watson examines the ways in which Roman law influenced later legal systems and how comparative law explains the role of law in society. He ties his explication throughout to individual issues. These include the structure of European legal systems, tort law in the French civil code, the structure of Blackstone's Commentaries on the Law of England, differences between contract law in France and Germany, the parameters of judicial reasoning, lessons to be drawn from feudal law, and the interests of governments in making and communicating law. He takes care to discriminate between law created by legislatures and law conceived by scholarly jurists or judges.

Booknews

Part one, a descriptive account of Roman law, is a revised version of Watson's (law, U. of Georgia) The Law of the ancient Romans (Dallas: SMU Press, 1970). Part two, on comparative law, is explicative, setting out a technique for understanding legal rules and institutions in all Western legal systems. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

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