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        • 法律圖書館

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        • LEARNING  ANGLO-AMERICAN LAW:A THEMATIC INTRODUCTION
          編號:20066
          書名:LEARNING ANGLO-AMERICAN LAW:A THEMATIC INTRODUCTION
          作者:BY KUO-LEE LI
          出版社:北大
          出版時間:2005年9月
          入庫時間:2005-9-12
          定價:29
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          TABLE oF CoNTENTS
          Chapter One:Anglo-American Law and You 1
          Section One:Political and Moral Perspective 1
          Section Two:Anglo-American Law Defined 2
          A. Common Law Countries 3
          B·subjects 0f the Common Law 4
          Section Three:Study 0f Anglo-American Law—Why,What and How 4
          A·What Is or Counts as Foreign Law—Deftnition and Clafification 5
          B·Why for Study of Anglo-American Law 5
          C.Reasons for Study—Summary 7
          D. Implications 0f Globalization of Law:International Trade.Commerce and
          Private Law—Unification and Uniform Application 8
          E.Similarity 0f Private Law Worldwide 9
          Section Four:Factors and Considerations Affecting Choice 0f
          Foreign Law 11
          A.Foreign Law Chosen on the Basis 0f Shared History and Tradition 11
          B. Foreign Law Chosen on the Basis of Supefior Human Value Conditions 11
          C·Foreign Law Chosen 0n the Basis of Special Relationship 11
          D· Foreign Law Chosen 0n the Basis 0f Superior Legal Structure and Framework 11
          E. Foreign Law Chosen on the Basis 0f the Rationality of Substantive Content
          0f Its Law。 12
          Section FiVe:Methodology and Approach of Foreign Law Study 13
          A.How Should Anglo-American Law Be Studied 13
          Section Six:Importance of Knowledge 0f Legal Research and Legal
          Materials 16
          Section Seven:Need for Study 0f Foreign Law in Vernacular 17
          Section Eight:What 0r the Subject Matter 0f Study 17
          A·Hot Topics and In—Demand Subject or Issue:Reactive Research 17
          B·Topics or Issues for Scholarly and Theoretical Research 18
          C·Study the Common Law 88 a Unique Legal System 18
          D.Study the Philosophical Ideas Informing Anglo—American Law l9
          Section Nine:Sources,Texts and MaterialS Of Study of
          Angl0.American Law 20
          Section Ten:Conditions and Factors Determinative of the Need and
          Viability of Legal Transplant 2D
          Chapter TWO:Sources 0f LaW in GeneraI 22
          Section One:C0des and Statutes 22
          Section TWO:Regulations,Decrees and Administrative Directives 22
          Section Three:Binding Nature or Significance of AdministratiVe
          Directives 23
          SectiOil FOUr:Judicial Deeisions 23
          Section Five:Non.state or Unofficial Sources of Law 24
          Section Six:Legal Pluralism and Legal Centralism——Written Law V.
          Unwritten Law,Express v.Implicit Law,Law in Book
          v.Law in Action 26
          A.Pre.(state)Law 26
          B.Relative Insignificance of Judicial Law(Settlement of Disputes) 27
          C.Implicit Law.Unwritten or Autonomous Ordering 28
          Section Seven:Custom 33
          Section Eight:Sources of American Law Worthy of Special Mention 35
          A.Statute Law 36
          B.Constitution as Source 37
          C.Treaties and International Agreements 38
          D.Administrative Law 38
          E.Compilations and Consolidations of Laws 38
          F.Coufl Rules 39
          G.Uniform State Law 39
          H.Secondary Authority 40
          I.Restatement of Law:Nature and Status 40
          J.View of Formalism vs.Realism as to What Counts as Law 4l
          K.Authoritative and Effective Decision as Source 42
          L.Integration of All Sources of Law—Generating Actions and Decisions 43
          Chapter Three:The Common Lllw 44
          Section One:Historical Development 0f the Common Law 44
          A.First:The Anglo—Saxon Period(Preceding the NorlIian Conquest,1066) 44
          B.Second:Formation of the Common Law(1066——1485):From Writs
          to Actions on the Case 44
          C.Third Period:Growth of Equity(1485—1832) 46
          D.Fourth:The Modera Period ‘ 49
          Section Two:Special Charactel"0f English Law 5O
          A.Distinct CharaeteristiCS 0f English Common Law 5l
          B.Courts Decide Fate of Statutes Through Interpretation 54
          C.US Courts Incorporate Legislative Innovations and Policies into Common
          Law Principles 54
          D.Courts Apply Principles Derived Ftom Statutes 55
          Section Three:Certain CharacteristicS 0f the Common Law Authoritv 55
          Section Four:Source$of the British Common Law 56
          Section Five:Importance of Legal Structure,Defining Categories
          and Concepts 57
          Section Six:English Judicial Organization 57
          Section Seven:Judicial Authority in England 6O
          Seetion Eight:Forrn and Content of English Judgments 6O
          Chapter FOur:Legal System and Foundation of Law of the United States 62
          Section One:General Remark 62
          Section Two:Reasons for Choiee 0f FOCUS 62
          Section Three:SDirit and Fundamental CharacteristiCS 0f American
          Law and Societv 63
          A.Liberry,Rights and Government by Consent 63
          B. Individualism,Competing Values and Personal Choice 63
          C.Distrust of Government:Separation and Limitation of Powers,Checks and
          Balances,Political Accountability and the BiU of Rights 63
          D.Pragmatism in Law 65
          E.Government under the Rule of Law 66
          F.Tolerance 67
          G.0ptimism 67
          H.Unity Out of Diversity 68
          I.Diversity as Divisiveneas:Disquieting Factors and Troubling V0ices 68
          Section Four:Basic Constitutional and Political Structure 69
          Section FiVe:Division and LimitS Of Legal Authority of the United States 70
          A.0riginality of American Law 71
          B. Place of Statute in American Law:The Abnormal 0r Excessive Attitude
          toward Statute 71
          SectiOil Six:AUocation of Legal Authority between Federal and
          State Govemmeilts 72
          A.1nherent Legal Authority of the States 72
          B.Jurisdiction of Federal LaW VS.Jurisdiction of State Law 72
          C.Supremacy ClaUSe 74
          D.PteemDtion Controversies 74
          E. Derivative PrinCiple 0f PreemptiOn Clause 75
          F. COntinued 1mportance of State and Local Law 75
          SectiOil Seven:Judicial Organization 75
          A.organiz8tiOil Of COlins 75
          B. Administrative AgencieS alld Tribunals 76
          C.State Courts 77
          D.Jury 77
          SectiOil Eight:AllOCation of Judicial AuthOrity 78
          A.Gelleral AUoc砒ion 78
          B.Two Primary Bases of Federal Jurisdiction 78
          c.strueture Parallel Systeins of Adjudicati。n:Judieialal Dualism 79
          D.Foreign Sovereign Itumuliities Act,28 u.S.C para. 1330 79
          E.Jurisdicti011 of the Supreme Court 8O
          SectiOil NiRe:Reception of the COmlTlOn Law in the United States 8l
          A.Ignorance and Slight。f the Common Law 82
          B.Influence of the Codi6cation Movement 82
          C.TriumDh ofthe Comnlon Law 82
          SectiOil Ten_-Is There a United States Common Law or a Distinct
          Common Law for Each State Individually 84
          A. Different Social alld Economic coilditions ProdliCed Diverse common Law 84
          B. Conimon Law Develop s along the Same Line alld Way as Legislation:
          Federal alld State 84
          c.complicating Factors 85
          Section Eleven:The C0hesion and Unity of Ametican Law 87
          Section Twelve:Unifying State Common Laws—Role of State and
          not Federal Courts 87
          Section Thirteen:Codification of American Common Law 88
          Section Fourteen:A Systematic Statement of the Common Law 89
          Section Fifteen:Protection from the Burdens of Multi.State
          Legal Authority 89
          A.Tradition of Uniform Laws 90
          B.Constitutional Limit on the Reach of State Court Jurisdiction and Choice
          of Law 9l
          C.Negative Commerce Clause 92
          Chapter Five:Case L8W:Form.Nature and Function of
          Judicial Decisions 94
          Section one:FOITll and Content of Judicial Decisions 94
          Section two:The Judicial Function 94
          Section Three:Meaning and Scope of the Rule of Precedent in
          British Law 95
          Section Four:Doctrine of Stare Decisis and Its Justification 96
          Section Five:The Doctrine of Stare Decisis and Ratio Decidendi or
          H0lding of a Case 96
          Section Six:Transforming Facts into Binding Legal Rules 9 7
          Section Seven:In Search of an Ideal Holding or Ratio Decidendi
          0f a Case 97
          Section Eight:Rule 0f Preeedent and Statute Law 99
          Section Nine:Obiter Dictum:Definition and Clarification 100
          Section Ten:Ratio,Obiter and PriBeiple 100
          Section Eleven:Doctrine of Stare Decisis in U.S.Law 101
          Section TwelVe:The Overriding Importance of the Opinions 0f the
          Appellate Courts 103
          Section Thirteen:Factors Likely to Figure in Distinguishing Decisions 103
          Section Fourteen:OppOSing Treatments 0f Precedents 104
          Section Fifteen:To Distinguish or To OVeITUle 105
          Section Sixteen:Multi-legged H0lding 105
          Section Seventeen:The Retroactive Efiect 0f Application 0f Judicial
          Decisions 106
          Section Eighteen:Contradiction and Tension between Predictabilitv
          and Hard Cases 107
          Section Nineteen:More Characterizations of the Common Law 108
          Section Twenty:Is the Common Law a Living Law 110
          Section Twenty—one:The Common Law——Vitality,Staying Powei"
          and Continuing Relevance 111
          Seetion Twenty-two:Common Law in the Welfae.e State 0f the
          Twentieth Century—the Age of Statutes 112
          Chaptel"Six:United States LaW in Action:the operatiVe and
          Intel'attive Dylllll311ics 114
          Section one:The De6ning Character and Spirit of Anglo-American Law 114
          Section two:The Contrast between Law in Action and Law in Book 114
          Section three:Sites,SoLIrces and Manifestations of Law and Legal
          System in Action:State and Non.state 118
          Section foIll":The Life of Law in Common Law America:Selective
          Accounts 0f the Interactive Dynamics of E1ite
          Power Deeisions 122
          A. Check and Balance:The Overriding PriBeiple of Interactivity 122
          B. Exemplary Interactive Relationships between the Presiderr,the Congress,
          the Court and the States 123
          C.Life and Fate of Legislation 127
          D.Judicial Attitude toward Legislation:The Legal Standing or Status of
          Legi8lation in the Legal System 128
          E.Place of Statute in American Law 128
          F.Trail8forilling Statutes into Coillmon Law:The Life of StBrute Take8 Oil the
          F01-m ofthe Commoll Law 129
          G.Nattire alld Content of the United States C0de 129
          H.Collstitutional Activism of the Judiciary 130
          I. Measul-e8 Takell to Countel-Anti—Demoerati(2 01"Unpopular Judicial RevieW 133
          J.Life and Fate of~t Common Law Rule or Commoll Law Cabe 135
          K.R0le of Lawyers in Shaping Judicial LaW 137
          L.Checking Judicial LgW by Legislative Deeision 01-Exeelltive Action 138
          M.Judge8 and Judge.made Law v8.Legislatul-e8 and LegislatiOil 139
          N.Scholarly Rendering and Exposition of Legislation 140
          ,O.Formatioll of Leading Cases:The Role and Contribution of Jurists 141
          P. Schol and Scholar’s Law Vel-suB Judges and Judicial Law 141
          Q.Sollle Anecdotal 0bservatiORS of the U.S.Legal System in Actioll. 144
          R.Conclusion l45
          S.In Sear(?h of Emerging Law l46
          Section five:Some Critical 0bservatioBS on the LaW of the United
          States in Action:Phenomenon of Idealization of Law.
          Juridification Saturation 0f SOCiety and
          Hypertrophying of Law and Legal Reason l48
          Section six:Modes and Levels of Dispute Resolution l50
          Section seven:Critique 0f the Efficiently Processed Dispute Theory
          and Its NotorioUS ConclUSioas l5l
          Chapter Seven:Good Legal System,Good Laws and Good Decision.
          nlakers Lawyers l56
          Section One:Legal System and System of Law Distinguished l56
          Section TWO:G00d Legal System Produces Good Laws l58
          A·The Formal and Proeedural Requirements for a G00d Legal System l58
          B.Legal Proteduralism l59
          Section Three:G00d Law Informs Good Legal System l6l
          A·SubstantiVe Moral Requirements for a Good Legal System l6l
          B.Democratic Foundation and Spirit of Law and Legal System l62
          C.Democratizing Law—Making(Authoritative and Efiective Decision)Process l65
          D.0pen and Transparent Decision—making l67
          E.Elite Powers and Demoeracy l69
          F.Equality bef_0re the Law:Equal Protectl‘on of the L8.WS l70
          G.Timely Access to the Court l71
          Section Four:The Virtue of Legal Simplicity l72
          A.General l72
          B.Some Defining Elements of Legal Simplicity l78
          Section FiVe:The Falsity 0f Legal Conplexity l74
          Section Six:Private Ordering Versus State Law l75
          Section Seven:Transnational Component ofthe National Legal System l 78
          Section Eight:Human Elements of a G00d Legal System and Good Law l79
          A.Rule of Law vs.Rule ofMan l79
          B.Good Lawyer,G00d Legal System and Good Laws l82
          C.Amexican Law Schools and Legal Education l88
          D.The Conditions and Requirements of a Good Judge l95
          E.Condition and Requirements of a G00d P01itician 201
          F. Conditioil and Requirements of a G00d Legal Scholar or Jurist 2D5
          G.ConditiOIlS and RequirementS 0f a G00d Citizen 2D9
          Chapter Eight:Legal ReasOn and Exeeuting DecisiOn 211
          Section one:Law and Legal Reason 2l3
          A.Nature of Legal Reason 2l4
          B.COntent oT Material Bases 0f Legal ReKSOFt 21 6
          C.Distinctive Nature and Superior StatUS 0f Reason 2l8
          D.Reason and Discretionary Decision 22l
          E.AlJure and Rick of Legal Reason 222
          F. Evaluation and Balancing of Reason 224
          G.Authoritative and Effective Decisions and Justifying Reason 226
          H.Truth and Mvth of Judicial Reason 227
          I.Moral,Epistemological Pluralism and Incommensurability 23l
          J.LimitS Of Legal Reason and LimitS 0f Knowledge 234
          K.Reason Runs 0ut 235
          L_subjective versus 0bjective Rcason 23 7,
          M.R~ason.Faith and 0ther BeliefSystems 238
          N_Belief in Disguise of Reason 24D
          O.Legal Reason is a Noble Scam:The Self_referential Nature of Law and
          Leg8l Reason 242
          P.Beyond Reason,Beyond Law;Without Reason,Withont Law 245
          Q.Law,Reason and Deep,Divisive SocialIssues 248
          R.Critique of Cynicl’sm,Defeatism and Self_denial of LaW alld Reason一
          “As If Jurispmdence'’ 250
          S.DOUbters,Law and Legal Reason 25l
          T.Truth in Law and Reason 252
          U.Emotion in Political and Moval Debate 255
          V.Defending and Redeeming Reason 256
          W.Re.imagine and Re.coilceptualize Law and Reason 258
          Chapter Nine:Civil Litigation 26D
          A.General Remarks 26D
          B.Start a Lawsuit with a Complaint and a Summons 260
          C.Responses to the Complaint 26J
          D.Truth and Adversarial Advocacy 263
          E.Multi—Party Actions 263
          F.Class Action 264
          G.DiScovery 265
          H.Pre.trial confefence 267
          I.Summary Judgment 267
          J.Trial 268
          K.Jury Trial and Selectioli 269
          L.Nature of Jury Decision 269
          M.TriaI or Legal Proceedings 269
          N.Jury Instructions 271
          0.Rogue Juror 272
          P.Appeals 274
          Q.ReasoEt for Appeal 275
          R.nnality Principle 275
          S.The“De NOVO 9’Nature of the AppeUant Proceedings 275
          T.Brief AmiCUB Curiac 276
          U.0ptions of Appellant Ruling 276
          V.Judge’s DiscretionAry Rulings 277
          Chapter Ten:Legal ReSearch and Legal Materials 278
          Sel3tion Oile:Legal Research in General 278
          Section TWO:Practical Legal Research 279
          A.Identify,Analyze and characterize significant Facts 280
          B.Identify and FOITIIUlate Legal Issucs 280
          C.Research the Issues and Update Findings 28j
          D. Idelltify and A118.1yze Social Change and Ttends 282
          Secti011 ThFee:Legal Matel"ials and Publications 282
          A.Publications Of Judicial Decisions 283
          B.Finding Case Law 285
          C.Findjng Legislation 287
          D.Finding Legislative Documents 289
          E.Finding Administrative Law 289
          F.Shepard’s Citatl’ons 290
          G.Lexis and Westlaw Online Services 29D
          Genel-fll References 293

          合計292頁

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