Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe

The purpose of this essay is to describe and analyse the historiography of law and the economy in Europe in the late nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. Three major themes or approaches can be identified within this intellectual history. The first is a sociological interest in the nature and...

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Main Author: Getzler, J
Format: Book section
Published: Oxford University Press 2012
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author Getzler, J
author_facet Getzler, J
author_sort Getzler, J
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description The purpose of this essay is to describe and analyse the historiography of law and the economy in Europe in the late nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. Three major themes or approaches can be identified within this intellectual history. The first is a sociological interest in the nature and evolution of modernity in society. Here the contested concept of ‘modernity’ is used to mean the emergence of a society and culture where personal identities and social practices and norms are no longer determined primarily by communal tradition but are to some degree chosen. The second approach is political, and centres on the emergence of the state as a chief framework for national and communal life, replacing local, religious, and kinship institutions. The third approach is economistic, and searches for the legal, governmental, and institutional factors that revolutionized the productive capacity of the economy and led to European domination of the world by 1900.
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spelling oxford-uuid:bf45dc51-8509-4722-b2ba-870812ee81a92022-03-27T05:46:11ZLaw, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century EuropeBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_3248uuid:bf45dc51-8509-4722-b2ba-870812ee81a9Symplectic Elements at OxfordOxford University Press2012Getzler, JThe purpose of this essay is to describe and analyse the historiography of law and the economy in Europe in the late nineteenth and earlier twentieth centuries. Three major themes or approaches can be identified within this intellectual history. The first is a sociological interest in the nature and evolution of modernity in society. Here the contested concept of ‘modernity’ is used to mean the emergence of a society and culture where personal identities and social practices and norms are no longer determined primarily by communal tradition but are to some degree chosen. The second approach is political, and centres on the emergence of the state as a chief framework for national and communal life, replacing local, religious, and kinship institutions. The third approach is economistic, and searches for the legal, governmental, and institutional factors that revolutionized the productive capacity of the economy and led to European domination of the world by 1900.
spellingShingle Getzler, J
Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe
title Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe
title_full Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe
title_fullStr Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe
title_full_unstemmed Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe
title_short Law, history, and the social sciences: Intellectual traditions of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Europe
title_sort law history and the social sciences intellectual traditions of late nineteenth and early twentieth century europe
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