How the Law Works
Müəllif | Gary Slapper |
---|---|
Nəşr olunduğu il | 2016 |
Elm sahəsi | Elm və təhsil |
Nəşriyyat | Routledge |
Nəşr yeri | London |
Gary Slapper. How the Law Works. London, Routledge, 2016.
The law in the United Kingdom has evolved over a long period. It has, over the centuries, successfully adapted itself through a great variety of social settings and types of government. Today it contains elements that are ancient, such as the coroner’s courts, which have an 800-year history, and elements that are very modern, such as electronic law reports and judges using laptop computers. Law has also become much more widely recognised as the standard by which behaviour needs to be judged. A very telling change in recent history is the way in which the law has permeated all parts of social life. The universal standard of whether something is socially acceptable is progressively becoming whether it is legal. In earlier times, most people were illiterate and did not have the vote. They were ruled, in effect, by what we would call tyranny.