The Routledge Handbook of Law and Society
Herausgeber: Darian Smith, Eve; Kotiswaran, Prabha; Valverde, Mariana; M. Clarke, Kamari
The Routledge Handbook of Law and Society
Herausgeber: Darian Smith, Eve; Kotiswaran, Prabha; Valverde, Mariana; M. Clarke, Kamari
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This innovative handbook, edited by four of the leading figures in the area, provides a comprehensive, and truly global, overview of the main approaches and themes at the intersection of of law and society.
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This innovative handbook, edited by four of the leading figures in the area, provides a comprehensive, and truly global, overview of the main approaches and themes at the intersection of of law and society.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 258
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 490g
- ISBN-13: 9780367694685
- ISBN-10: 0367694689
- Artikelnr.: 67370140
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 258
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 246mm x 174mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 490g
- ISBN-13: 9780367694685
- ISBN-10: 0367694689
- Artikelnr.: 67370140
Mariana Valverde is a Sociolegal Scholar, who has taught at the University of Torontös Centre for Criminology, and Sociolegal Studies Canada for 25 years. Kamari Maxine Clarke is a Professor at the University of Toronto in Criminology and Legal Studies, Canada, with a cross-appointment in Diaspora and Transnational Studies. Eve Darian-Smith is a Professor and the Chair of Global & International Studies Department at the University of California, Irvine, USA. Prabha Kotiswaran is a Professor of Law & Social Justice at King¿s College London, UK.
Contested laws, contested societies: introductory remarks Part 1:
Contemporary Perspectives and Approaches 1. Actor-Network Theory and socio
legal analysis 2. Critical legal studies: A curious case of hegemony
without dominance 3. Critical race theory: Emergence and New Lines of
Inquiry 4. Feminism 5. Governmentality and sociolegal studies 6. Indigenous
law: What non-Indigenous people can learn from Indigenous legal thought 7.
Liberalism 8. Postcolonial legal studies 9. Queer theory and socio-legal
studies 10. Transnational governance and law: Global security and
socio-legal studies Part 2: Sites of Engagement 11. Agriculture, Law, and
the State 12. Animals 13. Artificial Intelligence and Public Law 14.
Capitalism and capital 15. Censorship: state control of expression 16.
Cities and urbanization 17. Citizenship 18. Class and economic inequality
19. Climate Justice 20. Corporations 21. Data 22. Domestic work:
transnational regulation 23. Extractivism: Socio-legal Approaches to
Relations with Lands and Resources 24. Finance, banking and debt 25. Food
sovereignty and food justice 26. Gender and Law 27. Genocide 28. Human
Rights: Challenging Universality 29. Immigration, Law and Resistance 30.
Imperialism and law 31. Incarceration: how to understand imprisonment rates
32. Indicators: Sociolegal Dimensions of Quantification 33. Indigeneity:
making and contesting the concept 34. Infrastructure: socio-legal aspects
of a key word of our time 35. Islamic law and the state 36. Jurisdiction
37. Labour and employment 38. Legal consciousness 39. Migration 40.
Ownership: Persons, property, and community 41. Ownership of intangibles:
Intellectual Property and the Contested Commons 42. From reproductive
rights to reproductive justice 43. Settler colonialism 44. Sexuality 45.
Sovereignty 46. Space and belonging 47. Supply chains and logistics 48.
Territory and law 49. The Transnational Law of Human Trafficking 50. Water
disputes across borders 51. Water justice and indigenous peoples 52. White
Supremacy
Contemporary Perspectives and Approaches 1. Actor-Network Theory and socio
legal analysis 2. Critical legal studies: A curious case of hegemony
without dominance 3. Critical race theory: Emergence and New Lines of
Inquiry 4. Feminism 5. Governmentality and sociolegal studies 6. Indigenous
law: What non-Indigenous people can learn from Indigenous legal thought 7.
Liberalism 8. Postcolonial legal studies 9. Queer theory and socio-legal
studies 10. Transnational governance and law: Global security and
socio-legal studies Part 2: Sites of Engagement 11. Agriculture, Law, and
the State 12. Animals 13. Artificial Intelligence and Public Law 14.
Capitalism and capital 15. Censorship: state control of expression 16.
Cities and urbanization 17. Citizenship 18. Class and economic inequality
19. Climate Justice 20. Corporations 21. Data 22. Domestic work:
transnational regulation 23. Extractivism: Socio-legal Approaches to
Relations with Lands and Resources 24. Finance, banking and debt 25. Food
sovereignty and food justice 26. Gender and Law 27. Genocide 28. Human
Rights: Challenging Universality 29. Immigration, Law and Resistance 30.
Imperialism and law 31. Incarceration: how to understand imprisonment rates
32. Indicators: Sociolegal Dimensions of Quantification 33. Indigeneity:
making and contesting the concept 34. Infrastructure: socio-legal aspects
of a key word of our time 35. Islamic law and the state 36. Jurisdiction
37. Labour and employment 38. Legal consciousness 39. Migration 40.
Ownership: Persons, property, and community 41. Ownership of intangibles:
Intellectual Property and the Contested Commons 42. From reproductive
rights to reproductive justice 43. Settler colonialism 44. Sexuality 45.
Sovereignty 46. Space and belonging 47. Supply chains and logistics 48.
Territory and law 49. The Transnational Law of Human Trafficking 50. Water
disputes across borders 51. Water justice and indigenous peoples 52. White
Supremacy
Contested laws, contested societies: introductory remarks Part 1:
Contemporary Perspectives and Approaches 1. Actor-Network Theory and socio
legal analysis 2. Critical legal studies: A curious case of hegemony
without dominance 3. Critical race theory: Emergence and New Lines of
Inquiry 4. Feminism 5. Governmentality and sociolegal studies 6. Indigenous
law: What non-Indigenous people can learn from Indigenous legal thought 7.
Liberalism 8. Postcolonial legal studies 9. Queer theory and socio-legal
studies 10. Transnational governance and law: Global security and
socio-legal studies Part 2: Sites of Engagement 11. Agriculture, Law, and
the State 12. Animals 13. Artificial Intelligence and Public Law 14.
Capitalism and capital 15. Censorship: state control of expression 16.
Cities and urbanization 17. Citizenship 18. Class and economic inequality
19. Climate Justice 20. Corporations 21. Data 22. Domestic work:
transnational regulation 23. Extractivism: Socio-legal Approaches to
Relations with Lands and Resources 24. Finance, banking and debt 25. Food
sovereignty and food justice 26. Gender and Law 27. Genocide 28. Human
Rights: Challenging Universality 29. Immigration, Law and Resistance 30.
Imperialism and law 31. Incarceration: how to understand imprisonment rates
32. Indicators: Sociolegal Dimensions of Quantification 33. Indigeneity:
making and contesting the concept 34. Infrastructure: socio-legal aspects
of a key word of our time 35. Islamic law and the state 36. Jurisdiction
37. Labour and employment 38. Legal consciousness 39. Migration 40.
Ownership: Persons, property, and community 41. Ownership of intangibles:
Intellectual Property and the Contested Commons 42. From reproductive
rights to reproductive justice 43. Settler colonialism 44. Sexuality 45.
Sovereignty 46. Space and belonging 47. Supply chains and logistics 48.
Territory and law 49. The Transnational Law of Human Trafficking 50. Water
disputes across borders 51. Water justice and indigenous peoples 52. White
Supremacy
Contemporary Perspectives and Approaches 1. Actor-Network Theory and socio
legal analysis 2. Critical legal studies: A curious case of hegemony
without dominance 3. Critical race theory: Emergence and New Lines of
Inquiry 4. Feminism 5. Governmentality and sociolegal studies 6. Indigenous
law: What non-Indigenous people can learn from Indigenous legal thought 7.
Liberalism 8. Postcolonial legal studies 9. Queer theory and socio-legal
studies 10. Transnational governance and law: Global security and
socio-legal studies Part 2: Sites of Engagement 11. Agriculture, Law, and
the State 12. Animals 13. Artificial Intelligence and Public Law 14.
Capitalism and capital 15. Censorship: state control of expression 16.
Cities and urbanization 17. Citizenship 18. Class and economic inequality
19. Climate Justice 20. Corporations 21. Data 22. Domestic work:
transnational regulation 23. Extractivism: Socio-legal Approaches to
Relations with Lands and Resources 24. Finance, banking and debt 25. Food
sovereignty and food justice 26. Gender and Law 27. Genocide 28. Human
Rights: Challenging Universality 29. Immigration, Law and Resistance 30.
Imperialism and law 31. Incarceration: how to understand imprisonment rates
32. Indicators: Sociolegal Dimensions of Quantification 33. Indigeneity:
making and contesting the concept 34. Infrastructure: socio-legal aspects
of a key word of our time 35. Islamic law and the state 36. Jurisdiction
37. Labour and employment 38. Legal consciousness 39. Migration 40.
Ownership: Persons, property, and community 41. Ownership of intangibles:
Intellectual Property and the Contested Commons 42. From reproductive
rights to reproductive justice 43. Settler colonialism 44. Sexuality 45.
Sovereignty 46. Space and belonging 47. Supply chains and logistics 48.
Territory and law 49. The Transnational Law of Human Trafficking 50. Water
disputes across borders 51. Water justice and indigenous peoples 52. White
Supremacy