SSRN Home Search and Download Papers Browse Abstract and Paper Submission Subscribe to Networks View Briefcase Top Papers Top Authors Top Institutions

 

Abstract

 
 

References (48)

Beta

 
 

Citations (1)

Beta

 


 


Download | Share | Email | Add to Briefcase | Buy Hard Copy

What is Non-State Law? Mapping the Other Hemisphere of the Legal World

Marc Hertogh
University of Groningen - Faculty of Law


July 2007


Abstract:     
In recent years, the number of references to "non-state law" has increased dramatically. Most of these publications, however, on subjects ranging from customary law and indigenous rights to the rules of the world-wide-web, struggle with the same fundamental question: What is non-state law? Because most of this literature has a strong normative focus, important conceptual and empirical questions are left unanswered. This paper is an attempt to fill this gap. It is not a critique of the previous work by lawyers, social scientists and legal theorists. Neither does this paper set out its own theory of non-state law. Instead, its goal is more modest: to review the socio-legal literature on non-state law and to draw a tentative conceptual map of this "other hemisphere of the legal world". The first half of this paper discusses three waves of attention for non-state law in the socio-legal literature: "colonialism", "legal pluralism at home" and "globalization". In the second half, this literature is used to draw a conceptual map of non-state law. One dimension of this map differentiates between non-state law within and without the national state. The other dimension differentiates between non-state law as rules of conduct and as norms for decision. In this way, our map locates four different types of non-state law. Writing in the early twentieth century, Eugen Ehrlich argued that the legal scholars of his day seriously impoverished the science of law because they confined their attention to the national state. Today, in the rapidly changing "Global Bukowina" of the twenty-first century, Ehrlich's plea for a decoupling of law from the state has still lost little of its relevance and a "liberation from these shackles" seems more appropriate than ever.

Keywords: Legal Theory, Legal Pluralism, Globalization

Working Paper Series

Date posted: August 22, 2007 ; Last revised: October 12, 2007

Suggested Citation

Hertogh, Marc, What is Non-State Law? Mapping the Other Hemisphere of the Legal World (July 2007). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1008451


Export to: Export Citation What's this?

Contact Information

Marc Hertogh (Contact Author)
University of Groningen - Faculty of Law ( email )
9700 AS Groningen Netherlands
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


Paper statistics
Abstract Views: 1,308
Downloads: 345
Download Rank: 23,080
References: 48
Citations: 1

© 2009 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Terms of Use  Privacy Policy
This page was served by apollo2 in 0.110 seconds.