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  2. Law of South Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_South_Africa

    Countries (in pink) which share the mixed South African legal system. South Africa has a 'hybrid' or 'mixed' legal system, [1] formed by the interweaving of a number of distinct legal traditions: a civil law system inherited from the Dutch, a common law system inherited from the British, and a customary law system inherited from indigenous Africans (often termed African Customary Law, of which ...

  3. Law of Namibia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_of_Namibia

    Namibia has a 'hybrid' or 'mixed' legal system, [1] formed by the interweaving of a number of distinct legal traditions: a civil law system inherited from the Dutch, a common law system inherited from the British, and a customary law system inherited from indigenous Africans (often termed African Customary Law, of which there are many variations depending on the tribal origin).

  4. List of national legal systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_national_legal_systems

    The canon law of the Catholic Church has all the ordinary elements of a mature legal system: laws, courts, lawyers, judges. [38] The canon law of the Latin Church was the first modern Western legal system, [39] and is the oldest continuously functioning legal system in the West.

  5. Legal system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_system

    A legal system is a set of legal norms and ... families has been supplanted by the concept of legal traditions, in which hybrid or mixed systems are the ...

  6. Scots law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scots_Law

    Scots law (Scottish Gaelic: Lagh na h-Alba) is the legal system of Scotland. It is a hybrid or mixed legal system containing civil law and common law elements, that traces its roots to a number of different historical sources. [1] [2] [3] Together with English law and Northern Irish law, it is one of the three legal systems of the United ...

  7. Monism and dualism in international law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monism_and_dualism_in...

    The United States has a "mixed" monist-dualist system; international law applies directly in US courts in some instances but not others. The Constitution's Supremacy Clause states that treaties are part of the supreme law of the land, as suggested by the quote above; however, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Medellín v.

  8. Legal tradition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_tradition

    The understanding of legal families and traditions has shifted over time. Early and mid-20th-century efforts at classifying legal systems commonly employed a taxonomic metaphor, and assumed that the affiliation of a legal system with a legal family was static and that mixed legal systems were an exceptional case. Under more recent ...

  9. Legal pluralism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_pluralism

    Sources of Islamic law include the Koran, Sunnah and Ijma, but most modern Western nation-states take the basis of their legal system from the Christian superpowers of old (Britain, France etc.). That is also why moral laws found in the Bible have actually been made full-fledged laws, with the initial grundnorm set far back in legal history ...