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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 July 2024
The French School of the Far East has recently published under the above title an important study in comparative law, the conclusions of which go far beyond the juridical framework to which its tide and the author's background would appear to assign it. For this reason, it seemed necessary to call the work to the attention of readers of this journal, especially those who are interested in the problems of the relationships between the original indigenous infrastructure and the Indian and Chinese superstructures in South East Asia.
1 Among the most important of these, it is appropriate to mention:
'L'Esclavage privé dans le vieux Droit siamois' (Etudes de sociologie et d'ethnologie juridiques, VI), Paris, 1931.
'Vinaya et Droit laïque, Etudes sur les Conflits de la Loi religieuse et de la Loi laique dans l'Indochine hînayâniste' (Bulletin de l'Ecole française d'Extrème-Orient, XXXVII, 1937).
'Le Régime des Biens entre Epoux en Thaïlande' (Revue indochinoise juridique et economique, III, 1942).
'L'Influence juridique de l'Inde au Champa et au Cambodge d'après l'Epigraphie' (Journal Asiatique, 1949).
'Evolution of Law in Burma and Siam' (Journal of the Siam Society, XXXVIII, 1950).
2 Promulgated in 1777. But the section utilised by M. Lingat goes back to the fifteenth century.
3 'Les Langues de l'Indochine' (Conférences de l'Institut de Linguistique de l'Université de Paris, VIII, p. 67).
4 G. Coedès, ‘Les Civilisations indochinoises' (Tropiques, No. 342, mai 1952, p. 27).