Description
Legal Heterodoxy in the Global South provides a comprehensive analysis of how legal systems in developing countries have evolved to address unique economic, social, and political challenges. Rather than simply importing Western legal frameworks, countries in the Global South have developed distinctive legal institutions and practices tailored to their specific contexts.
Davis and Pargendler explore how these heterodox legal approaches reflect different priorities, constraints, and development trajectories. The book examines various jurisdictions and legal domains, demonstrating that legal diversity in the Global South is not merely a gap in development but represents meaningful institutional variation. This work challenges assumptions about legal convergence and offers insights into how law functions as a tool for economic development and governance in emerging markets.







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