There are two ways of understanding the title of this chapter: it can either mean ‘comparative law’ and development, or it can refer to comparative ‘law and development’. Both variants are addressed in the following. In the sense of ‘comparative law’ and development, the chapter considers how insights drawn from comparative law can assist development policy. This reflects the aim of traditional comparative law to provide policy recommendations while also responding to the criticism that traditional comparative law is largely uninterested in the countries of the developing world.
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