Francesco Serpico, «Pugnar con le ombre». La critica al segreto inquisitoriale nella cultura giuridica napoletana tra Sei e Settecento, Napoli, Esi, 2017, pp. 309
Open Access Rg 25 is dedicated to the concept of »Multinormativity«, one of the four research focus areas of our Institute. The introduction to the thematic focus »Multinormativity« sheds light on both what is meant by »Multinormativity« and wherein the difference to »legal pluralism« lies. The subsequent contributions ask about constellations and modalities of legal diversity, about constellati-ons of interaction in and the normative levels behind the juridical praxis. This panorama extends from »collaborative legal pluralism« of spiritual, secular and moral-theological normativity in the 16th century to the differentiae-literature and the ius commune of the 17th and 18th centuries to scholarly practices and the standardisation of good scholarly praxis in the same period. The 19th and 20th-century courts of honour are presented as places where different normative rationalities came together, the internal pluralisation of the normative orders through a more consistent democratisation of norm generation in the present are worked out, and the normative charging of transnational rights since the 1970s are demonstrated by the example of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and their interaction with state, national or intergovernmental and international law. Two authors deal with the symbiosis of legal and illegal normative orders in the area of criminal politics, another contribution takes up legal aesthetics and analyses the coupling of value judgments (both of an aesthetic and moral kind), and in doing so delves deep under the surface of normative thinking and acting. Two further contributions devote their attention to observing talk about legal diversity. The second focus emerged out of a research project at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development and examines »Criminal Law and Emotions«: Prefaced with an introduction to the topic, a first article explores the emotional dynamics of negotiated justice in European legal cultures from the 15th to the 18th century, followed by a contribution on »Legal Insanity: Towards an Understanding of Free Will Through Feeling in Modern Europe«. Moving to the early 20th century, the third article »Beyond Dispassion« analyses how norms about emotions changed for judges in revolutionary Russia. This section closes with an examination of »Rhetorical Engineering of Emotions in the Courtroom« which deals with the emotional norms and lawyer's courtroom performances in modern France. The research section, which opens the issue, begins with a reflection about the major question of the relationship between law, time and legal history. Andreas Thier has taken up this challenge. Using precisely selected prominent examples stemming from the classic texts of legal history – such as the potestas legislatoria, the conception of office (Amtsbegriff), the eternity clause, systems of knowledge ordering, natural law, statute of limitation and legal fiction, damnatio memoriae or periculum and periculum in mora – he illustrates the diverse realisation of law and time between the early Middle Ages and modern period. As a second contribution to this section, we are again publishing an article about the contemporary history of legal scholarship in the Berlin Republic. In the context of the Institute’s project Legal Scholarship in the Berlin Republic, Jan Thiessen dealt so exhaustively with the history of trade- and corporate law – in the language of the Berlin Republic: the company law – that we decided to print this piece of radical contemporary history. Finally, in the critique section, a particular emphasis on monographs that take up the historical forms of normative diversity is evident again. As always, we are very grateful to the reviewers for discussing as many publications as possible in languages other than those in which they were written. As this issue demonstrates, multilingualism is for us here both a guiding principle and reality. Summary - publisher Le présent ouvrage réinvente au travers de 10 séquences les grands thèmes abordés dans l'enseignement de l'introduction au droit. Liant histoire et sources du droit, hiérarchie des normes et droit européen, ces 10 séquences permettent d'aborder différemment la matière juridique en revenant sur les grandes notions qui la constituent mais également en proposant des situations qui montrent leur mise en application. 69ème congrès de la Commission Internationale pour l’Histoire des Assemblées d’Etat 5-8 sept 20173/9/2017
Présentation
Le droit a perdu son centre, la guerre des valeurs fait rage et l'Etat est submergé par la techno-économie mondiale. Notre système juridique actuel se caractérise dès lors par le nihilisme juridique. A partir de ce constat, à la croisée de la philosophie, de la théorie juridique et de l'histoire du droit, Natalino Irti ne voit plus qu'une bouée de sauvetage: le formalisme juridique et les choix individuels. Explorant le thème de la nature, des rapports entre droit et économie, de la calculabilité du droit ou encore de la violence, ce penseur européen nous invite à penser notre postmodernité. Essai de Natalino Irti publié en Italie en 2004 et traduit de l'italien par Madame Anne-Marie Bertinotti, Paolo Alvazzi del Frate et Nader Hakim, professeur à l'Université de Bordeaux. sommaire |
sito di informazione su temi di storia giuridica a cura di
paolo alvazzi del frate (univ.roma tre) paolo.alvazzi@uniroma3.it Categorie
Tutti
organizzazione del sito:
Alfonso Alibrandi (Univ. Roma Tre) Gianmarco Palmieri (Univ. Roma Tre) Gabriele Russo (Univ. Roma Tre) per contattare i curatori del sito: paolo.alvazzi@uniroma3.it - alfonso.alibrandi@uniroma3.it Indirizzo postale: prof. Paolo Alvazzi del Frate, Univ. Roma Tre, via Ostiense 161 - 00154 Roma |