To Compare or Not to Compare? Reading Justice Breyer

Abstract

Justice Breyer\u27s new book The Court and the World presents a number of productive challenges. First, it provides an opportunity to reflect generally on extra-judicial scholarly activities. Second, it is a major and important - but also troubling - contribution to debates about comparative law broadly, and the opening of domestic constitutional regimes to external law and legal phenomena more specifically. I begin by suggesting a critique of the first of these points. These are merely some thoughts on the implications of extra-judicial scholarship. The greater portion of this essay, however, is devoted to a reading of Justice Breyer\u27s book, which is a compelling manifesto supporting comparative law and, at the same time, a frustrating example of the problems plaguing our project

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