Preliminares (PDF)
Preface (PDF)
General Report
Part One
Federalism and Legal Unification: A Comparative Empirical Investigation of Twenty Systems (PDF)
Halberstam, Daniel
Reimann, Mathias
I. Introduction
1. The Need for this Study
2. Federalism Defined
3. Database and Method
4. Three Caveats
5. The Structure of this General Report
II. Modes of Legal Unification
1. Top-Down Unification: Central Government Power
2. Coordinate Unification: Cooperation among the Member Units
3. Unification through Non-State Actor
4. Legal Education and Legal Practice
5. The Impact of International Law
6. Summary and Evaluation
III. Levels of Legal Unification
1. Uniformity by Areas of Law
2. The Uniformity by Federal System
IV. Explaining Unification
1. The Legislative Power Hypothesis
2. Structural Centralization Hypothesis
3. The Legal Traditions Hypothesis: Civil v. Common Law
4. Political Parties
5. Territorially Bounded Cleavages
6. The Age of Federations
V. Conclusion
Appendix1: Countries and Reporters
Appendix 2: Method
Appendix 3: National Reports Questionnaire and Scorecard
Appendix 4: Supplemental Expert Scorecard and Control Questions
National Reports
Part Two
Argentina (PDF)
Vítolo, Alfredo
Belgium (PDF)
Vítolo, Alfredo
Canada (PDF)
Grennon, Aline
India (PDF)
Parikh, Sunita
Netherland (PDF)
Van Rijn, Arjen
South Africa (PDF)
Govender, Karthy
Spain (PDF)
Torres Pérez, Aida
United Kingdom (PDF)
Banakas, Stathis
United States of America (PDF)
Maxeiner, James
Reporters (PDF)