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- W2611893387 abstract "LINNAEAN TAXONOMY AND GLOBALIZED LAW The Court and the World: American Law and the New Global Realities. By Stephen Breyer. New York: Andrew A. Knopf. 2015. Pp. 8, 284. $27.95.INTRODUCTIONIn the mid-seventeen hundreds, Carl Linnaeus, the famed Swedish botanist, invented the system of binomial nomenclature to identify and classify all living organisms.1 Binomial nomenclature involves associating all living things, plants and animals alike, with a name that indicates the genus and species of the organism.2 Linnaeus believed, correctly, that in order to understand the natural world, one first had to organize and classify living organisms for future study.Although law is not biology, properly identifying and classifying categories of phenomena is no less important to understanding similarities and differences in the than it is in the natural world.3 This is particularly true in the context of comparative law; to borrow a commonplace metaphor, one must be sure that a comparative law exercise compares apples to apples, rather than apples to oranges.4 So too, insofar as our domestic law is becoming increasingly globalized-in response to economic, political, and social globalization-it is essential to specify the particular modalities of that are at work. Positing the existence of legal globalization in highly generic terms will preclude a careful observer from testing the persuasive force of the claim that is taking place in the United States (and, more broadly, across many other national systems).Framed in terms of Linnaeus and his system of binomial taxonomy,5 in order to understand the of law, both in the United States and abroad, one must first make a serious effort to identify and classify different types of interactions among and between domestic and international systems-including, but not limited to, the transplantation of rules and ideas among and between local systems.6 This Review constitutes an initial effort to do just this: to identify, disentangle, and name different kinds of contemporary, globalization. In undertaking this effort, I will give sustained and focused attention to Justice Stephen Breyer's provocative book, The Court and the World: American Law and the New Global Realities.7Justice Breyer mounts a highly persuasive case that the question for debate today is not whether domestic courts in the United States will consider foreign and international law; instead, he posits that already is a reality in many important contexts. He observes that [m]ore and more, cases before the Court involve foreign activity (pp. 3-4) and sees new challenges imposed by an ever more interdependent world (p. 4). Ultimately, Breyer hopes thatan understanding of the nature of our current engagement with foreign matters will persuade the reader that the best way to preserve American constitutional values (a major objective that I hold in common with those who fear the influence of foreign law) is to meet the challenges that the . . . actually presents. (p. 8)If one properly disentangles various strands of transnational judicial engagement, however, the case for is weakest in the context of reading and applying the U.S. Constitution.8 This is so precisely because globalizing domestic constitutional law clearly reflects an act of judicial will rather than an act born of decisional necessity.9 Just as the Supreme Court should avoid deciding constitutional questions absent some clear need to do so to resolve a case at bar,10 justices should abjure consideration of foreign and international law absent a clear need for engaging such materials in the pages of the U.S. Reports.This Review will proceed in four parts. Part I provides an overview of Justice Breyer's important book, The Court and the World, and sketches his main arguments, ideas, and proofs. …" @default.
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- W2611893387 date "2017-04-01" @default.
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- W2611893387 title "Linnaean Taxonomy and Globalized Law" @default.
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