Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Law without the state
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Law without the state (also called transnational stateless law, stateless law, or private legal orderings) is law made primarily outside of the power of a state.
Such law may be established in several ways:
- It may emerge in systems such as existed in feudal Europe prior to the emergence of the modern nation state with the treaty of Westphalia.[1][2]
- It can be established as customary law such as that practiced by indigenous communities.[3][4]
- Non-state actors may create it,[5][6] for instance in the form of "soft law".
- According to various theories of anarchist law, it could result from how a society would organize itself without formal government.[7]
Remove ads
See also
- List of national legal systems – System for interpreting and enforcing the laws
- Religious law – Ethical and moral codes taught by religious traditions
- Islamic Courts Union – Somali legal and political organization (2000–2009)
- Beth Din – Rabbinical court of Judaism
- Kris (Romani court)
- Jirga – Assembly of Pashtun tribal leaders
- Lex Mercatoria – Part of the history of contract law
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads