Key publications and projects
Over the past ten years, the members of the research group have published a wide range of projects, edited books, textbooks and thesis's, on topics related to legal culture, legal history and comparative law. In addition, several members, alone or jointly, have published articles in recognized journals, both nationally and internationally.

Main content
These excellent publications have contributed to establish legal cultural studies as a separate discipline in Norway and have had an important impact on the international discourse on the topic. Almost all publications are a result of collaborations between two or more members of the research group.
Research projects
International Hub of Excellence for Legal Cultural and Comparative Legal ´óÏó´«Ã½Ìý
The Research Group for Legal Culture, Legal History and Comparative Law will expand it's international network within comparative legal research with the aim to establish Bergen as an internationally recognised hub in the field. The network will develop interdisciplinary curiosity-driven research to examine and explain the relationships between law in Norway and other countries as well as international and supranational law. Specifically, the research group will develop a research project "Legal Realism as the regulatory foundations of Norwegian and Scandinavian Law", which will examine legal realism as the predominant ideology of law in the Scandinavian countries. We will also offer a national PhD course in comparative research methods, based on analytical models and teaching materials developed in Bergen.
The first seminar related to the project will be held in Bergan on December 15th.
You can read more about the investment in of the Research Council of Norway.
An overview of preserved legal lectures from the 19th century
²ú²âÌýMarius Mikkel Kjølstad, who is a research fellow in legal history at the Faculty of Law, University of Bergen.
- Finished and published on this website in 2023.Ìý
Recycling Medieval Law
An interdisciplinery research project withÌýDepartment of Linguistic, Literary and Aesthetic ´óÏó´«Ã½.
Interdisciplinary research projectÌýon HanseaticÌýCourt Records fromÌýthe Hanseatic Office in Bergen
The research project is an interdisciplinary collaboration between theÌýstate archivesÌýin Lübeck, Hanseatic Museum inÌýBergen, the Faculty of Humanities and the Faculty of Law.
Early modern forms of Global Governance – New perspectives on the intellectual and institutional structures of the Hanseatic League
The research project is a collaborative project including the University of Bergen, the University of Innlandet, the University of Lund, the University of Tartu, Universität Hamburg ²¹²Ô»åÌýGeorg-August-Universität Göttingen.
Cycle Ius Commune at Borders: Borders of Ius Commune
Previous research projects
Nordic and Germanic Legal Methods – AÌýLegal Comparative Analysis 2012-2014.
The project is funded by theÌýMeltzer-fondet, FU-UiB,ÌýE-On Ruhrgas ²¹²Ô»åÌýDeutsch-Nordischer Juristenbund. The project was in the running for Juristforbundets prize in 2015. Contributers: Ingvill Helland, Johan Bouch, Sören Koch, Dag Michalsen, Hans Peter Haferkamp, Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde, og flere andre.
The project also resulted in the bookÌýÌýwritten by Ingvill Helland ²¹²Ô»åÌýSören Koch.
Written by Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde.
Grunnloven i skjæringspunktet mellom erfaring og visjon
Retten og det norske - Rettslig grunnlag for fremveksten av en norsk identitet mellom 1814 og 2014
Høyesteretts historie frem til 2015
Books
The group's most recent collaboration project is the bookÌýComparing Legal Cultures,Ìýwhich hasÌýbecome the leading textbook on comparative law in Norway. Due to its universal approach and comprehensive and coherent presentation of 15 legal cultures, this book is increasingly used internationally as well. Nine of the group's members contributed to the book with their unique knowledge on particular legal cultures such as Norway, Germany, England & Wales and Italy (See also ). In 2019 the members of the research group contributed with 6 articles and a volume of 130 pages to theÌýliber amicorumÌýin honor of the 50thÌýanniversary of the law faculty.
Sören Koch and Jørn ØyrehagenÌýSunde (eds.).Ìý


Ìý1st edition was published in 2017, and the 2nd edition was published in 2020. The bookÌýis Norway's newest and most frequently used textbook in comparative law, and shows the strong connection between research and education. Both members and associated members of the research group has contributed in the making of the book, and it is therefore one of many products resulting from the research group's collaborations. The bookÌýidentifiesÌýand explains the special legal historical features of fifteen different legal cultures, and contributes in that manner to create an understanding in regard to challenges on the internationalisation of law, legal pluralism and opposition to such tendencies in society and among legal scholars.
Marius Mikkel Kjølstad (eds.).Ìý

By Marius Mikkel Kjølstad, in 2023.
Frederik Stang was one of the most central political figures in Norway in the 19th century, primarily as a minister for almost 30 years. What did Stang think society should look like? His lectures on natural law from 1830 to 1831 give us a good insight. In this book, the lectures are published in a transcribed version. We learn what Stang thought about, among other things, philosophy, the essence of man, the task of the court, property, contracts, marriage and family, punishment, the purpose of the state, distribution of power and democracy. The lectures shed new light on his thinking, but also on the natural law tradition in Norway and the way historians have portrayed Stang afterwards. In the introduction, the book's editor Marius Mikkel Kjølstad argues for a new understanding of the lectures.
Frederik Stang (1808–1884) was a docent and lecturer in jurisprudence from 1830 to 1834. He published a state law book in 1833, which for several decades stood as the leading interpretation of the Constitution. As a minister, he carried out important reform work in many areas of society. Stang helped to strengthen the government's political position, and in 1873 he became the first prime minister in Norway after the office of governor was removed.
For more information see .
Sören Koch and Marius Mikkel Kjølstad.Ìý

By Sören Koch and Marius Mikkel Kjølstad, from 2023.
Sören Koch and Marius Mikkel Kjølstad have written the book Springer Handbook for Legal Cultures. A Selection of the World's Legal Cultures. The first edition was published by Springer Nature in 2023.
The book provides the first systematic overview of selected legal cultures. The book is based on a different classification system than the classic distinction between common and civil law, and thus enables legal cultural comparison.
For more information about the book see .
Jørn Øyrehagen SundeÌýand Brage Thunestvedt Hatløy.Ìý

By and Brage Thunestvedt Hatløy, from 2022.
Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde and Brage Thunestvedt Hatløy have written a book about 'Eidsivatinget. The Norwegian ting tradition over 1000 years', which was published by Cappelen Damm Akademisk in 2022.
According to the saga, the Eidsivatinget was set at Eidsvoll in the year 1022 by Olav 2 Haraldsson, better known as Olav the Holy. The Eidsivating was one of four lagting in Norway, and was held at Eidsvoll until 1620. The Norwegian lagting from the Middle Ages were abolished in 1797, but re-established in 1887, and Eidsivating has since then been one of the Norwegian courts of appeal.
Is there a connection between the medieval ting to the modern lagting in Norway today? The question is explored in this book through a number of contributions which together cover 1,000 years of Norwegian legal history. The ting tradition is carried on from the early Middle Ages until it becomes a central part of the Norwegian governance system in the High Middle Ages. It retained its position for several hundred years and was then seriously demolished from the 17th and especially in the 18th century. From 1814, the ting tradition slowly experienced a renaissance, but with quite different functions and forms than in the Middle Ages. In the face of a digital everyday life, new changes will come, and the history of the ting tradition can play a role in the design of the ting's future.
For more information see .
Giertsen et al.Ìý

Ìýwas published in honor ofÌýthe Faculty of Law's 50th anniversary. Members of the research groupÌýcontributed with sixÌýarticles and a volume of 130 pages.
Eirik Holmøyvik and Dag Michalsen.

µþ²âÌýEirik HolmøyvikÌý²¹²Ô»åÌý, in 2015.
The purpose of the book is to provide law students with an insight in Norwegian constitutional history, but can be read by anyone who wants an insight into Norwegian constitutional history. The book is funded on research on constitutional history.Ìý
The textbook on constitutional history provides a thorough introduction to Norwegian constitutional history from 1814 to the present day. An important ambition is to present the Norwegian constitutional development in the light of international contexts and tendencies. The starting point is the modern constitution and its emergence around 1800 on the basis of natural law and the constitutional theories of the Enlightenment. The Norwegian constitution of 1814 was part of this international constitutional movement. In the book, the creation and content of the Constitution is explained historically and comparatively. The Norwegian constitutional development after 1814 is illuminated through the Constitution's amendments and changing interpretations in key areas such as the distribution of power and state sovereignty, the political and constitutional consequences of the union with Sweden between 1814 and 1905, the rise and development of the courts' right to review laws and the Constitution's importance in times of crisis and state of emergency.
More information can be found on .
Ingvill Helland and Sören Koch (eds.).Ìý

By Sören Koch ²¹²Ô»åÌýIngvill Hell²¹²Ô»åÌý(eds.), inÌý2014.
ÌýisÌýintroducing and comparing different theories of legal sources and principles of interpretation in their legal cultural context, this volume deals with similarities and differences in legal argumentation as obstacles to and facilitators of harmonisation of law in Europe.
More information can be found onÌý.
Eirik Holmøyvik.Ìý

µþ²âÌýEirik Holmøyvik, from 2012.
Maktfordeling og 1814Ìýdeals with the principle of distribution of power, and explains how it became a key principle in constitutional law from the late 1700.Ìý
More information can be found .
Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde and Knut Einar Skodvin (eds.). Ìý

µþ²âÌý and Knut Einar Skodvin (eds.), from 2010.
The book has been developed in collaboration between Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde and Knut Einar Skodvin, written especially for students in comparative law.
Law is culture - it is not only a matter of written text and enforcement bodies, but also of perceptions and expectations. These change continuously through observations of foreign law. In that way, it can be said that all European legal cultures are essentially intermingled legal cultures, and that the encounter between the foreign and the familiar forms the very core of a legal culture. This means that the internationalization of the law is nothing new. At the same time, the scope and pace are rarely great because different legal cultures meet in the Court of Human Rights and the ECtHR. This is the theme of the Rendezvous of European Legal Cultures, together with how the Nordic and Sami legal cultures are situated in relation to the national and European legal cultures.
More information can be found onÌý.
Sören Koch,ÌýLeidulf Melve, Anna Elisa Tryti. Eigedom og HistorieÌý
Fagbokforlaget 2024 (Ongoing).
More information will follow.
Sören Koch. The Norwegian Legal System and Culture in a nutshell
Gyldendal forlag 2023.
More information will follow.
Articles
2023
Ìý
Naturrett i Norge ca. 1814–1840. OgsÃ¥ en historie - ²ú²âÌýMarius Mikkel Kjølstad,ÌýinÌý, p. 3-89.
Da pensum var hÃ¥ndskrevetÌý- ²ú²âÌýMarius Mikkel Kjølstad, inÌýÌý24. August 2023.
Legal Culture - diversity and structureÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören KochÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýMarius Mikkel Kjølstad, inÌýSpringer Handbook for Legal CulturesÌý2023.Ìý
Vi holder pÃ¥ med Ã¥ bøte noe pÃ¥ de fleste lovbøker i landetÌý- byÌýBrage Thunestvedt Hatløy,ÌýPrologen til Landslova,ÌýinÌýLandslova av 1274. Rett, politikk og samfunn i norsk høgmellomalder, Dreyer Forlag A/S 2023.
Livet er et uavhendelig gode.ÌýNorsk regulering av medvirkning til selvvalgt livsavslutning i lys av internasjonale utviklingerÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch, inÌýTidskrift for RettsvitenskapÌý2023 (ongoing).
How to teach comparative law.ÌýA new approach based on interactive learning-strategiesÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch, inÌýRabel Journal for Comparative LawÌý2023 (ongoing).
2022
Ingunn Elstad: TvangsevakueringaÌý- by Jørn Wangensten Ruud,ÌýinÌýHistorisk tidsskriftÌý2022, p. 375-378.
"Eg gÃ¥r med pÃ¥ det tingmennene kallar lov" -ÌýTingets rolle i Magnus Lagabøters landslov av 1274Ìý- ²ú²âÌýBrage Thunestvedt Hatløy,ÌýinÌýEidsivatinget: Den norske tingtradisjonen gjennom 1000 Ã¥r, by Jørn Øyrehagen Sunde abd Brage Thunestvedt Hatløy (red.), Cappelen Damm 2022.
Pluralistische Governance: Die Erforschung hansischer Kooperation jenseits von klassischen StaatskonzeptenÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch, Ulla Kypta and Johann Ruben Leiss, inÌýHansische Geschichtsblätter,ÌýCallidus 2022.
National Laws and Contract InterpretationÌý- by Yuliya Chernykh, inÌýContract Interpretation in Investment Treaty ArbitratrionÌý2022, p. 73-110.
Male offenders and convicted females: Sexual crimes and infanticide in Norway during the 17th and 18th centuryÌý- ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýRechtskultur - Zeitschrift für Europäische RechtsgeschichteÌý2020, p.Ìý29-48.
Ulv og bjørn i norsk natur – ein rettsleg regulert konflikt i over 1000 Ã¥rÌý- ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýLov og RettÌý2020, p. 521-534.
2021
Natural Law and the struggle with pietism in eighteenth-century Denmark-Norway - Ludvig Holberg (1684-1754)Ìý- byÌýSören Koch,ÌýinÌý. The Writings of Great Nordic Jurists,ÌýRoutledge 2021.
Konfliktlösung in West-SkandinavienÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch,ÌýinÌý, Handbuch zur Geschichte der Konfliktlösung in Europa 2021.
2020
Grotius’s Impact on the Scandinavian Theory of Contract LawÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch, 2020.
Pant i norsk mellomalderÌý- ²ú²âÌýBrage Thunestvedt Hatløy,ÌýinÌý, Nasjonalbiblioteket 2020.
The EnlightenmentÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören KochÌýand Kristjan Mejrup, inÌý. The Writings of Great Nordic Jurists, Routledge 2020.
NorwayÌý- by Anine Kierulf ²¹²Ô»åÌýMarius Mikkel Kjølstad,ÌýinÌý2019 Global Review of Constitutional Law,ÌýICONnect and the Clough Center for the study of Constitutional Democracy, Boston College 2020, p. 254-258.Ìý
Anne Larsdatter. Det døde barnet ved Fjell kirkeÌý- ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýLokalhistorisk magasinÌý2020 (1), p. 20-24.
Seksuelle overgrep mot barn i norsk rettshistorieÌý- ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýSlekt og dataÌý2020.Ìý
Older
2019ÌýDen 'moderne resepsjonen' - Internasjonaliseringen i undervisning og forskning mellom 1969 og 2003Ìý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch,ÌýinÌýRett i Vest. Festskrift til 50-Ã¥rsjubileet for jurist-utdanningen ved Universitetet i Bergen, Fagbokforlaget 2019, p.Ìý.
2019ÌýKomparativ mellomalderrett - Eit døme pÃ¥ rettshistorisk komparativ metode- ²ú²âÌýBrage Thunestvedt Hatløy,ÌýinÌýFordom og forventning, Akademisk Publisering 2019,Ìý.
2019ÌýDei første jusstudentane i BergenÌý-Ìý²ú²âÌýBrage Thunestvedt Hatløy,ÌýinÌýRett i Vest. Festskrift til 50-Ã¥rsjubileet for jurist-utdanningen ved Universitetet i Bergen, Fagbokforlaget 2019,Ìý.
2019ÌýDet rettsvitenskaplige klosterÌý- ²ú²âÌýMarius Mikkel Kjølstad,ÌýinÌýRett i Vest. Festskrift til 50-Ã¥rsjubileet for jurist-utdanningen ved Universitetet i Bergen,ÌýFagbokforlaget 2019, p. 41-58.
2019ÌýTranskriberte tingbøker som utgangspunkt for rettshistorisk forskingÌý- ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýFordom og forventning: Ei handbok i rettshistorisk metode, Akademisk Publisering 2019, p. 165-183.Ìý
2018ÌýBesovede Qvindfolks Børn som døde findis: Relasjonelt og sosialt utgangspunkt for barnedrapstiltalte i Hordaland 1642–1799. Barnedrap og skjulte barnefødslar pÃ¥ 1600- og 1700-talet - ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýÌý- Lokal og regional historieÌý2018, Volum 55.(1), p. 62-77
2018ÌýCourts of Appeal in NorwayÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch,ÌýinÌýSuum Cuique Tribuere. Legal Contexts, Judicial Archetypes and Deep-Structures regarding Courts of Appeal and Judiciaries from Early Modern to Late Modern Europe, Institutet för Rättshistorisk Forskning 2018.
2017ÌýPrecedents in the 21st century: the evolution of case law in the Norwegian Supreme Court 1970-2016Ìý- by Morten Nadim, 2017.
2017ÌýLiability Assessments and Criminal Responsibility in Norwegian Legal HistoryÌý- ²ú²âÌýSiri Elisabeth Bernssen, inÌýBergen Journal of Criminal Law & Criminal Justice2017, p. 59-76.
2017ÌýPeter Høilund: Naturret som samfundskritikÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch,ÌýinÌýÌý2017, Volum 130, p.Ìý115-121.
2016ÌýJus naturae methodo scientifica pertractatumÌý(Natural Law considered according to the Scientific Method) 1740-1748 Christian Freiherr VON WOLFF (1679-1754)Ìý- avÌýSören Koch,ÌýiÌýThe Formation and Transmission of Western Legal Culture. Books that made the Law in the Western World,ÌýSpringer Publishing Company 2016.
2016ÌýLøfte og aksept - Naturrettens innflytelse pÃ¥ fortolkningen av NL 5-1-1 og 5-1-2 pÃ¥ 1700-talletÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch, inÌýÌý2016,ÌýVolum 129, p. 337-371.
2015ÌýEn naturlig rettsorden for det dansk-norske kongeriket – en rettshistorisk analyse av Ludvig Holbergs lærebok i natur- og folkerettÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch, 2015.
2015ÌýConsequences of changing expectations to law and its institutions Illustrated by the role and background of judges in NorwayÌý- ²ú²âÌýSören Koch,ÌýinÌýÌý2015.
Ph.D.-projects
Ongoing projects
Axel Hjo.ÌýNordic styles of constitutional preview – different institutions, similar conversations?Ìý
Axel Hjo is writing a Ph.D-thesis (2022–2026) on constitutional preview of parliamentary decisions in the Nordic countries.
Marius Mikkel Kjølstad.ÌýIdeas about the purpose of the state in Norwegian legal and political thought between 1814 and the First World War
Marius Mikkel Kjølstad is writing his doctoral thesis on ideas about the purpose of the state in Norwegian legal and political thought between 1814 and the First World War. The project investigates fundamental ideas about what tasks the state was supposed to carry out in the said period. Moreover, the study aims to clarify the historical functions of such ideas within legal thinking. The overarching ambition is to gain a deeper insight into the state theory of a period of great import in modern Norwegian history.
Aurora Laugerud.ÌýThe development of criminal culpability and evidentiary assessment in the 17th and 18th centuries
Aurora Laugerud is a Ph.D-candidate in the history of criminal law and started on her thesis in 2023.
Tarjei Ellingsen Røsvoll.ÌýRules on delegation in Norwegian administrative law
Tarjei Ellingsen Røsvoll is writing a thesis on the rules on delegation of public authority in Norwegian administrative law. A central part of this thesis consists in understanding the development of the rules on delegation as part of the establishment of modern administrative law, and thus how the role of these rules have changed. The overarching aim is to understand the rules of today, partly through an analysis of the historical conditions for their emergence.
Finished projects
Siri Elisabeth Bernssen. Children as victims of sexual abuse
Siri Elisabeth Berntsen submitted her thesis in 2023 and is now a guest lecturer at the University of Bergen. The main theme of her Ph.D-project was sexual intercourse with children during the history of Norwegian criminal law. Through investigations of both judicial and extrajudicial sources, the thesis not only provides a representation of how the law has changed, but also discusses why this development has occurred. In addition to a legal historical presentation, one of the main purposes was to identify and contribute to greater understanding and knowledge of the basic values and normative concepts of which the current criminal law regulation of sexual intercourse with children is a product.
The Ph.D. project was started in June 2019 and was affiliated withÌýResearch group for Family and Children Law, Succession Law and Law of Persons,ÌýResearch group for Legal CultureÌýogÌýResearch group for Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure. Her Ph.D.ÌýsupervisorÌýwasÌýJørn JacobsenÌý²¹²Ô»åÌý. She now works in Oslo, but is still a member of the Legal Culture research group, supervisor for master's students and a guest lecturer.
Brage Thunestvedt Hatløy. Continuity and change in property law in Magnus Lagabøter's land law of 1274
Brage Thunestvedt Hatløy defended his Ph.D in 2021 at the University of Bergen with the titel "". Hatløy studied how the Landslova is similar to and differs from older, comparable sources of law, and the content of the Kjøpebolken was compared with the rules from the older Gulatingslova, the Frostatingslova and the Bjarkøyretten for Nidaros. The Kjøpebolken deals with topics that we would today call property law: debt claims, buying and selling, traveling salesmen, mortgaging and more. His supervisor was , who is now employed at the University of Oslo. Hatløy is now a postdoctoral fellow and leads the Research Group for Legal Culture together with Professor Sören Koch.
Sören Koch.ÌýA natural legal order for the Danish-Norwegian kingdom
Professor Sören Koch finished his second in 2015.Ìý
Ìý