'This forceful analysis of the genealogy of ''Western'' comparative legal ideas and practices joins and strengthens the new approaches to comparative law. Veronica Corcodel traces the marginalizing definitions and exclusionary representations of the ''non-West'' throughout the discipline's history from its colonial-imperialist start to the apologetic social-liberal modernization in the twentieth century and finally the post-war justifications of liberal transformation. She courageously challenges the anything but innocent hegemonic agendas of the mainstream. Connecting knowledge with power, she reveals the ''dirty secrets'', that is the governance implications of comparative law. An informed, illuminating, and persuasive book.'--Günter Frankenberg, Goethe University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany'A deeply insightful foray through the classics of comparative law. Veronica Corcodel provides an indispensable key to understanding how the legal West has constructed the legal rest. The book meticulously exposes the uneven seams, abrupt transitions, and open contradictions characterizing the treatment of legal difference in the world by the foremost Western comparativists. Their perennial promise of greater inclusion of national legal others does not necessarily mean equal standing with the West. Rather, it is another site for both advancing and contesting Euro-American legal values.'--Jorge L. Esquirol, Florida International University, US