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Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 1: Introduction

pp. 1-12

Authors

, European University Institute, Florence
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Summary

‘Lawyers are professionally parochial. Comparative law is our effort to be cosmopolitan.’1 This statement may seem exaggerated, but there is also a good deal of truth in it. Most lawyers are almost entirely trained and specialised in the law of their domestic jurisdiction. Thus, as soon as lawyers leave the borders of their own country, they may feel as if they are stranded on a foreign planet. Learning about comparative law aims to address this problem. But where do you start? Which method do you apply? And is it really feasible to learn about all laws of the world?

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