The Shifting Meaning of Legal Certainty in Comparative and Transnational Law
By (Author) Professor Mark Fenwick
Edited by Mathias Siems
Edited by Stefan Wrbka
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
21st September 2017
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Comparative law
International law
Company law
Consumer protection law
Company, commercial and competition law: general
340.1
Hardback
328
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
630g
The principle of legal certainty is of fundamental importance for law and society: it has been vital in stabilising normative expectations and in providing a framework for social interaction, as well as defining the scope of individual freedom and political power. Even though it has not always been fully realised, legal certainty has also functioned as a normative ideal that has structured legal debates, both at the national and transnational level. This book presents research from a range of substantive areas regarding the meaning, possibility and desirability of legal certainty in the context of a rapidly changing global society. It aims to address these issues by bringing together scholars from various jurisdictions in order to examine changes in the shifting meaning of legal certainty in a comparative and transnational context. In particular, the book explores some of the tensions that now exist between the conventional expectation of legal certainty and the various challenges associated with regulating highly complex, late modern economies and societies. The book will be of interest to lawyers concerned with understanding the transformation of core rule of law values in the context of contemporary social change, as well as to political scientists and social theorists.
Mark Fenwick is Professor at the Graduate School of Law, Kyushu University, Japan. Mathias Siems is Professor of Commercial Law at Durham Law School, Durham University, UK. Stefan Wrbka is Associate Professor at the Graduate School of Law, Kyushu University, Japan.