340 Recht
Refine
Year of publication
- 2016 (86) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (31)
- Working Paper (27)
- Review (13)
- Book (5)
- Contribution to a Periodical (5)
- Part of Periodical (4)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
Language
- German (50)
- English (31)
- Multiple languages (3)
- French (2)
Has Fulltext
- yes (86)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (86) (remove)
Keywords
- republicanism (3)
- Art. 7 EU (2)
- Rule of Law (2)
- US Supreme Court (2)
- domination (2)
- global justice (2)
- non-domination (2)
- AGG (1)
- Altersvorsorge (1)
- Antidiskriminierungsrecht (1)
Institute
- Rechtswissenschaft (62)
- Gesellschaftswissenschaften (9)
- Präsidium (9)
- Exzellenzcluster Die Herausbildung normativer Ordnungen (5)
- Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE) (5)
- Center for Financial Studies (CFS) (4)
- Geschichtswissenschaften (4)
- Wirtschaftswissenschaften (4)
- Neuere Philologien (3)
- House of Finance (HoF) (2)
Schneller als erwartet fängt Donald Trump an, seine Versprechungen, mit denen er sich die Stimmen der radikalen Rechten im Wahlkampf erkauft hat, einzulösen. Und er scheint die Möglichkeit der Befriedung der Ultra-Rechten gefunden zu haben: die Nominierung eines neuen Richters am Obersten Gerichtshof der Vereinigten Staaten, dem Supreme Court.
This paper reflects on legal pluralism. How did medieval societies incorporate both unwritten customs and written law at the same time? How did they constitute the process of finding justice? What is the essense of legal pluralism, and will it help us understand the situation of Taiwan’s indigenous population?
We aim to solve these problems by taking a closer look at medieval Saxony: for around 400 years, both laws given by the authorities and traditional customs in Saxony worked fine in parallel. The latter were put into writing by the legal practitioner Eike von Repgow around 1230 for reasons unknown. We refer to his collection of laws and customs of the Saxons as the Sachsenspiegel ("Mirror of Saxons").
While Saxons certainly differed from Taiwan’s indigenous population for many reasons, such as the supposedly weaker egalitarianism among the Saxons than among at least some indigenous groups, the two show some remarkable similarities nonetheless. Just like the Taiwanese Gaya, the Sachsenspiegel’s spiritual origin raises the claim to validity. Furthermore, comparing the handling of a person’s sale of inherited property, the legal situations in the Sachsenspiegel and Taiwan’s unwritten customs resemble each other. The heir can transfer only property he acquired personally. Furthermore, the author discusses the different character of courts and procedure under oral law in contrast to written modern law.
Finally, the paper concludes with some remarks about a learned commentary on the Sachsenspiegel written around 1325, combined with an outlook on the possible future of Taiwanese customs.
Die Diskussion über die Frage, ob die Politik offener Grenzen mit dem geltenden Recht in Einklang steht, gewinnt an Dynamik und Tiefenschärfe. Wir freuen uns, dass mit Roman Lehner erstmals ein Fachkollege auf unsere andernorts vertretene Auslegung der Dublin III-VO und des Schengener Grenzkodex erwidert und uns dabei attestiert hat, mit Art. 20 IV Dublin III "einen sehr klugen Gedanken in die Debatte gebracht" zu haben. Im Ergebnis widerspricht uns Lehner gleichwohl. Seine Gegenthese lautet im Kern: Schutzanträge an der deutsch-österreichischen oder einer anderen Binnengrenze unterfallen Art. 3 Abs. 1 und nicht Art. 20 Abs. 4 Dublin-III-VO, weshalb die Zuständigkeits- und letztlich die Antragsprüfung in Deutschland und nicht in Österreich stattzufinden haben. Dieser Einwand beruht freilich auf einem grundlegenden Missverständnis der Konzeption des Gemeinsamen Europäischen Asylsystems (GEAS) und speziell des Art. 3 Abs. 1 S. 1 Dublin III.
This article compares the legislation promulgated by the Synod of Granada (1572) and the Third Mexican Provincial Council (1585) regarding procedural canonical law. Diego Romano, bishop of Puebla, served as a vehicle between the Spanish and Mexican Assemblies, and he was clearly inspired by the former when drafting the latter. The article pays attention to the level of appropriation and via a comparison of the texts addresses the question whether it is possible to say that Iberian procedural law was copied by the prelate.