Complete Issue. In: InterDisciplines. Journal of History and Sociology. Jg.3 H. 2. 17.12.2012
Inhalt
- References
- Daniel Siemens
- Is legal history the exclusive domain of legal historians?
- Current research on the cultural history of law
- Comparative and transnational research on law and history: Which way to go?
- References
- Justice as ›performance‹? The historiography of legal procedure and political criminal justice in Weimar Germany
- Henning Grunwald
- I.
- II.
- III.
- References
- Universalization, Particularization, and Discrimination. European Perspectives on a Cultural History of 19th century International Law
- Miloš Vec
- Universalization: From Europe to the whole world
- Particularization
- Positivistic turn and explicit Europeanization
- Historicism and sources of international law: the Europeanization of Europe
- Welcome to the club, sovereigns!
- Christendom
- Civilization
- A structural discrimination
- Conclusion
- References
- »Law and society« in imperial Russia
- Stefan B. Kirmse
- Introduction
- Studying law and legal practice: Towards interdisciplinarity
- Studying law in the Russian Empire: Omissions and achievements
- Some reflections on promising avenues of research
- Property claims in late imperial circuit courts: Some evidence from Crimea
- Conclusion
- References
- Globalization of legal cultures in the 19th century. Criminal trials, gender, and the public in Meiji Japan
- Daniel Hedinger
- Introduction64F
- The case
- Figure 1: »Kinsei jinbutsushi. Hanai Oume,« Coloured newspaper page by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, 1877. Source: Yamamoto Shinbun, Nr. 263, 20 Aug. 1887.
- The legal background
- The Trial
- Figure 2: »Notes from the public trial of Hanai Ume,« Black-and-white print, double page. Artist unknown. Source: Satō 1887: 26–27.
- The Aftermath
- Conclusion
- References
- Economic perspectives on the history of law: Property rights in business history100F
- Ulrike Schulz
- Introduction
- The abstract core of property: Assigning agents specific scopes of action and decision-making capacities
- The link: »Recognition« as a key concept in property rights theory
- Property rights structures in firms
- Conclusion
- References
- Priority, Property, and Trust
- Axel C. Hüntelmann
- Law in the history of science. Legal aspects and patent law in the history of pharmaceuticals
- The state regulation of pharmaceuticals
- (Pre-)history of patent law and pharmaceuticals
- Before there were patents: Quarrels about priority and originality
- Patents and science in action. The importance of patents at the Institute for Experimental Therapy and the Georg Speyer House
- Economic capital and public trust. The patenting of Friedmann’s tuberculosis remedy
- Wrapping up—the relation between patent law, priority, property, and trust in a broader context
- References
