Teacher
|
GIALDRONI STEFANIA
(syllabus)
The course aims at illustrating, through a critical approach, the long journey of European and Western legal history between the Late Antique and the Modern Period. Starting from a description of the social, political and economic context, the legal institutions will be analyzed in their historical dimension, focusing the attention on legislation, on jurisprudence, and on the effects they had on case law. The lessons will be divided into two modules: 1) Middle Ages (3rd-15th cent.) and 2) Modern Era (16th-19th cent.). This chronological subdivision is justified by the elements of novelty that marked the transition from one era to another. Sometimes these are purely juridical elements, more often events of a social, economic or religious nature produced decisive repercussions on the world of law.
(reference books)
Antonio Padoa Schioppa, "Storia del diritto in Europa. Dal medioevo all’età contemporanea", Bologna: Il Mulino, 2007 or 2016
The students must NOT study part 5th and 6th as well as the following paragraphs (2007 edition):
Parte prima: par. 3.6 (gli Anglosassoni)
Parte seconda Par. 9.2 (Regni) Parr. 14.3 (Il Regno di Germania), 14.4 (Il Regno di Francia); 14.5 (La Pensiola iberica); 14.6 (Scandinavia); Cap. 16 (La formazione del Common law)
Parte terza: Par. 22.2.2 (Spagna) Par. 22.2.3 (Portogallo) Par. 22.2.6 (Danimarca e Norvegia) Par. 22.2.7 (Svezia) Par. 22.2.8 (Lo Stato sabaudo) Par. 24.2 (Olanda) Par. 24. 3 (Germania) Par. 24. 4 (Svizzera)
|