The Evolution of Law and the State in Europe: Seven Lessons
Spyridon Flogaitis -Bloomsbury Publishing, 06 nov 2014
Anteprima del libro |
Most
books about public power and the state deal with their subject from the
point of view of legal theory, sociology or political science. This
book, without claiming to deliver a comprehensive theory of law and
state, aims to inform by offering a fresh reading of history and
institutions, particularly as they have developed in continental Europe
and European political and legal science. Drawing on a remarkably wide
range of sources from both Western and Eastern Europe, the author
suggests that only by knowing the history of the state, and state
administration since the twelfth century, can we begin to comprehend the
continuing importance of the state and public powers in modern Europe.
In an era of globalization, when the importance of international law and
institutions frequently lead to the claim that the state either no
longer exists or no longer matters, the truth is in fact more complex.
We now live in an era where the balance is shifting away from the
struggle to build states based on democratic values, towards fundamental
values existing above and beyond the borders of nations and states,
under the watchful gaze of judges bound by the rule of law.