Compară metode
Examinează metodele selectate una lângă alta; rândurile care diferă sunt evidențiate.
| Analiza de conținut juridic axată pe evaluare× | Cercetare juridică doctrinară× | |
|---|---|---|
| Domeniu | Metode de teren | Metode de teren |
| Familie | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Anul apariției≠ | Late 20th century; evaluation-focused applications emerged prominently from the 1990s onward | 19th century (systematised ~1860s–1880s in common law jurisdictions) |
| Autorul original≠ | Builds on Klaus Krippendorff's content analysis framework and legal scholarship traditions | Common law tradition; systematised by jurists such as A.V. Dicey and John Austin |
| Tip≠ | Systematic qualitative/quantitative legal document analysis | Legal-analytical research method |
| Sursa seminală≠ | Krippendorff, K. (2004). Content Analysis: An Introduction to Its Methodology (2nd ed.). Sage Publications. ISBN: 978-0761915454 | Hutchinson, T. (2013). Researching and Writing in Law (3rd ed.). Thomson Reuters. ISBN: 9780455229829 |
| Denumiri alternative | legal text evaluation, evaluative legal content analysis, assessment-oriented legal content analysis, legal document evaluation research | black-letter law research, legal doctrine analysis, analytical jurisprudence, traditional legal scholarship |
| Înrudite≠ | 5 | 6 |
| Rezumat≠ | Evaluation-focused legal content analysis is a systematic method for examining legal texts — statutes, regulations, court decisions, contracts, or policy documents — with an explicit evaluative purpose: to assess whether and how well legal instruments achieve specified goals, standards, or values. It combines the structured coding procedures of content analysis with normative legal evaluation criteria, enabling researchers and practitioners to make evidence-based assessments of legal effectiveness, compliance, or quality. | Doctrinal legal research is the foundational methodology of legal scholarship. It systematically identifies, reads, and analyses authoritative legal sources — statutes, case law, constitutional texts, and regulations — to describe, explain, and critique the content and internal logic of legal doctrine. By working within the accepted hierarchy of legal sources, it answers the question 'What is the law?' with analytical rigour and interpretive precision, producing descriptions of settled doctrine and arguments for how ambiguities should be resolved. |
| ScholarGateSet de date ↗ |
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