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RUBIN, AVI (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   112175


From legal representation to advocacy: attorneys and clients in the Ottoman Nizamiye courts / Rubin, Avi   Journal Article
Rubin, Avi Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Professional attorneyship emerged in the Ottoman Empire in tandem with the consolidation of the Nizamiye ("regular") court system during the late 19th century. This article analyzes the emergence of an Ottoman legal profession, emphasizing two developments. First, the Nizamiye courts advanced a formalist legal culture, exhibited, inter alia, by the expansion of legal procedure. Whereas the pre-19th century court of law was highly accessible to lay litigants, the proceduralization of court proceedings in the 19th century limited the legibility of the judicial experience to legal experts, rendering legal counseling almost indispensible in civil and criminal litigation. Second, the reformers made efforts to render state-granted legal license a sign of professional competence, presenting a formal distinction between the old "agents" (vekils), who lacked formal legal training, and the professional "trial attorneys" (dava vekils). In practice, however, lawyers of both categories had to adapt to the Nizamiye formalist culture.
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2
ID:   163461


Was there a rule of law in the late Ottoman Empire? / Rubin, Avi   Journal Article
Rubin, Avi Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract The rule of law is a widely used term in scholarship on Ottoman legal reforms. Nevertheless, the actual meaning of this notion is rarely clarified in the writing on the late Ottoman Empire although theorists of law have discussed the ambiguity of this term. This article aims at examining the value of the rule of law as an analytical category when discussing socio-legal change in the late Ottoman Empire. The article demonstrates that the rule of law can be a meaningful category for historical analysis when conceived through a ‘cultural perspective’ to the law.
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