Gifts : A Study in Comparative Law - Richard Hyland

Gifts

A Study in Comparative Law

By: Richard Hyland

Paperback | 1 February 2012

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Gifts: A Study in Comparative Law is the first broad-based study of the law governing the giving and revocation of gifts ever attempted. Gift-giving is everywhere governed by social and customary norms before it encounters the law and the giving of gifts takes place largely outside of the marketplace. As a result of these two characteristics, the law of gifts provides an optimal lens through which to examine how different legal systems engage with social practice. The law of gifts is well-developed both in the civil and the common laws. Richard Hyland's study provides an excellent view of the ways in which different civil and common law jurisdictions confront common issues. The legal systems discussed include principally, in the common law, those of Great Britain, the United States, and India, and, in the civil law, the private law systems of Belgium and France, Germany, Italy, and Spain.

Professor Hyland also serves a critique of the dominant method in the field, which is a form of functionalism based on what is called the praesumptio similitudinis, namely the axiom that, once legal doctrine is stripped away, developed legal systems tend to reach similar practical results. His study demonstrates, to the contrary, that legal systems actually differ, not only in their approach and conceptual structure, but just as much in the results.
Industry Reviews
"Professor Hyland has written a work of massive but accessible comparative scholarship dealing with a problem that engages the attention of every legal system: how the law does and should regard gifts-with what mixture of permission, encouragement, and regulation. After setting the stage by reviewing the variety of social scientific treatments of the social meaning and significance of the gift, and explaining the utility and limitations of comparative studies, Hyland conducts a detailed, fascinating comparison of the approaches taken by the Western legal traditions. The book will be an indispensable resource for students of the gift, and of comparative law in general." --Richard A. Posner, Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit Senior Lecturer, University of Chicago Law School "Hyland's exploration of why the legal mind so often concludes that gift giving is a danger to society is a work of scholarly comparison the likes of which we have not seen since Mauss's classic text. The book changes the terms of debate about the gift and is a must for anthropologists, sociologists, philosophers and historians and other scholars interested in the burgeoning multi-disciplinary literature on the gift." --Chris Gregory, Professor of Political and Economic Anthropology, University of Manchester "This book is masterful! The doctrinal material is extremely significant, consistently interesting, and exceptionally well done. The scholarly effort and intellect that went into this book are both obvious and staggering." --Melvin A. Eisenberg, Koret Professor of Law, Boalt Hall Law School, University of California, Berkeley "Richard Hyland's Gifts is a 'gift' to comparative law. Miraculously, this learned exposition of the law surrounding the practice of gifts is a page-turner. Going far back in time and widely across the world's legal systems, Prof. Hyland has produced a masterpiece, showing how the seemingly simple and everyday act of gift giving has generated a wealth of legal issues and a panoply of solutions." --George A. Bermann, Gellhorn Professor of Law & Jean Monnet Professor of European Union Law, Columbia University School of Law "Certain to become a landmark in the extraordinary interdisciplinary conversation about gift giving. Gifts will serve the practicing lawyer well, especially one with a cosmopolitan client base." As erudite as this work is, however, the material remains thoroughly accessible. Written in prose that is a model of concise lucidity, the material is readily digested, consumed in chunks either large or small. The material will be useful to someone who picks up the book and reads a section or two, seeking an answer to a particular legal question. But the book is ultimately a page-turner and anyone who absorbs one section is likely to succumb to its richness and turn to the beginning, reading the book as it ultimately demands to be read-from cover to cover." Iris J. Goodwin, Associate Professor, University of Tennessee College of Law ABA Real Property, Trust, and Estate Law Journal "Professor Hyland's important book about the long shadow of the donatio deserves the attention of both judges and scholars. It represents a turning point in the study of the law of gifts." --Encarnacion Roca Trias, Justice of the Spanish Supreme Court Professor of Civil Law, University of Barcelona "Richard Hyland has undertaken a particularly demanding task. He has written the first wide-ranging modern monograph on gift law. It is principally a work of comparative law, but one that is also wonderfully well informed about the anthropological, economic, and social background of gift giving. Even legal history is examined. The book fills a gap that many have long felt. It is a truly foundational work, one that hardly anyone would be able to study in a single reading, but in which one can always read with great benefit." --Reinhard Zimmermann, Director of the Max Planck Institute of Comparative Law, Hamburg "The sheer expertise of the author can be easily identified in this book which gives a critical approach to the subject of comparative laws which raises many an intriguing debate in the mind of the reader." --Barnik Ghosh, India Law Journal "A fascinating story, superbly told here by a true master of our craft." -- Hans W. Baade, Hugh Lamar Stone Chair Emeritus in Civil Law, University of Texas at Austin American Journal of Comparative Law "This is a magnificent book. Richard Hyland has presented us with a great gift." -- Ewod Hondius, European Review of Private Law "It is, undoubtedly, a scholarly comparative work of significance to anyone interested in the act of giving...The account is probing and thought provoking." --Robert Cunningham, Faculty of Law, The University of Western Australia Anthropological Forum "Hyland provides a fascinating comparative study of the law with much to stimulate the interest of the reader. He rightly identifies the uneasy relationship between legal principle and social phenomena and the difficulties which arise from a failure by lawyers to understand social institutions in their broader perspective, which may require reference to their historical origins, political and economic influences and sociological and anthropological material. In short, lawyers, by focusing on legal niceties, run the risk of overlooking the role played by gift giving in society." --Paula Giliker, Professor of Comparative Law, University of Bristol Common Law World Review "Hyland is aware of the dialectical unity of gifts and contracts, so that, depending on which side you come from, the one may appear to be free and the other obligatory. The three fundamentals of contract are obligation, mutual assent and autonomy of the parties; and the gift lacks all three...Thanks to Richard Hyland's scholarship, no-one any longer has an excuse to rest on one side of the Great Divide. For me, Gifts opens up the tantalizing prospect of studying the dialectical movement of transactional modes in history, drawing on western comparative law to fill the gaps left by ethnographers and historians." --Keith Hart, Professor of Anthropology Emeritus Goldsmiths, University of London "The book is a must-have for every comparativist, in that it is a critical analysis of the different theories of comparative law which makes it an indispensable tool when working in that field of the law...I thoroughly enjoyed working through Hyland's work and hope that it will receive the acknowledgement and recognition that it deserves for being an authoritative contribution to the subject field." --Christian Schulze, Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, University of South Africa

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