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| Analisi Legale Comparativa Longitudinale× | Ricerca Archivistica Storica× | |
|---|---|---|
| Campo | Metodi sul campo | Metodi sul campo |
| Famiglia | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Anno di origine≠ | Late 20th century (comparative law foundational texts 1960s–1998; longitudinal integration from 1990s onward) | 19th century (formalized ~1820s–1880s) |
| Ideatore≠ | Konrad Zweigert and Hein Kotz (comparative law foundation); longitudinal dimension integrated in socio-legal and legal history scholarship | Historians and archivists; systematised through the professionalization of historical scholarship in the 19th century |
| Tipo≠ | Qualitative-interpretive legal research design | Qualitative primary-source research |
| Fonte seminale≠ | Zweigert, K., & Kotz, H. (1998). An Introduction to Comparative Law (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN: 978-0198268598 | Hill, M. R. (1993). Archival Strategies and Techniques. Sage Publications. ISBN: 978-0803951853 |
| Alias | LCLA, diachronic comparative law, longitudinal legal comparison, dynamic comparative legal research | archival research, historical document analysis, archival history, primary source research |
| Correlati≠ | 5 | 6 |
| Sintesi≠ | Longitudinal comparative legal analysis examines how legal rules, doctrines, or institutions develop and diverge across two or more legal systems over an extended period. By combining the spatial dimension of comparative law with the temporal dimension of longitudinal research, it captures not just differences between jurisdictions at a single point but the trajectories of legal change — convergence, divergence, transplantation, and resistance — over years or decades. | Historical archival research is a systematic method of investigating the past through the critical examination of primary source documents preserved in archives, libraries, and institutional collections. Researchers locate, access, authenticate, and interpret original records — such as government documents, correspondence, diaries, maps, and institutional files — to reconstruct events, trace processes, and build evidence-based historical arguments. It is foundational to historiography and widely applied across humanities and social science disciplines. |
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