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Title Außergerichtliche Konfliktlösung in der Antike Beispiele aus drei Jahrtausenden / Guido Pfeifer, Nadine Grotkamp (editions.)
Published Frankfurt am Main : Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, 2017. (Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2015)

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Description 1 online resource (1 electronic resource (vi, 171 pages ))
Series Global Perspectives on Legal History, 2196-9752 ; volume 9
Global perspectives on legal history ; v. 9. 2196-9752
Book collections on Project MUSE
Contents Einführung / Guido Pfeifer, Nadine Grotkamp -- Konfliktlösungsstrategien prähistoricher Zeit / Heidi Peter-Röcher -- Zum aussergerichtlichen Vergleich in Mesopotamien in der Zeit der Wende vom 3. zum 2. Jahrtausend volume Chr. / Hans Neumann -- Aussergerichtliche (?) Massnahmen in mittelbabylonischer Zeit / Susanne Paulus -- Aussergerichtliche Konfliktlösung im spätbronzezeitlichen Syrien im Lichte der Dokumente aus Emar und Ekalte / Lena Fijałkowski -- Neubabylonische Zeit : Prozessrecht und (seltene) Beispiele der aussergerichtlichen Konfliktlösung / Alessandro Hirata -- Conflict solving strategies in late Pharaonic and Ptolemaic Egypt : the demotic evidence / Mark Depauw -- Das convicium als Beispiel aussergerichtlicher Konfliktlösung in Rom / Anna Margarete Seelentag -- Schiedsgerichtsbarkeit und aussergerichtliche Konfliktbereinigung im klassichen römischen Recht
Summary "Antiquity is often utilized as a reference to provide a historical dimension for contemporary phenomena. This also holds true for the prevailing scientific discourse on alternative or adequate remedies of dispute resolution. In this context, historical perspectives seem to be in vogue as narratives to legitimize one or another role model, whereas studies on practical examples from ancient legal orders tend not to be given serious consideration in the current debate.Just as in the case of contemporary legal research, ancient legal history also distinguishes litigation at court from other mechanisms of conflict resolution. Nevertheless, where do the boundaries of judicial and extra-judicial mechanisms of dispute resolution lie within the framework of ancient societies? Are they alternatives in a narrower sense? Is there evidence for concerning the reason there was no (or at least no exclusive) judicial decision? This volume offers a selection of studies of pertinent illustrative material pertaining to these questions. While the relevant sources stemming from the prehistorical period, the Ancient Near East, Hellenistic Egypt and Classical Roman law may vary greatly, this just serves to widen our perspective on ancient times.Heidi Peter-Röcher focuses on strategies of conflict resolution in prehistoric times corresponding to different forms of violence. Hans Neumann, Susanne Paulus, Lena Fijałkowska and Alessandro Hirata delve into case studies situated in the Ancient Near East from Sumerian to Neo-Babylonian times. Three other contributions examine Graeco-Roman Antiquity: Marc Depauw considers non-Greek, i.e., demotic, material from a Hellenistic kingdom, Anna Seelentag embraces the phenomenon of public clamour in the Roman Republic, and Christine Lehne-Gstreinthaler provides a fresh look at the classical arbitration from the perspective of ancient legal history."
Notes International conference proceedings
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Description based on print version record
Subject Law, Ancient.
Dispute resolution (Law) -- History
Law, Ancient
Dispute resolution (Law)
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Grotkamp, Nadine, editor
Pfeifer, Guido, editor
Project Muse.
LC no. 2019666913
ISBN 9783944773186
3944773187