ABSTRACT

This innovative handbook provides a comprehensive, and truly global, overview of the main approaches and themes within law and society scholarship or social-legal studies.

A one-volume introduction to academic resources and ideas that are relevant for today’s debates on issues from reproductive justice to climate justice, food security, water conflicts, artificial intelligence, and global financial transactions, this handbook is divided into two sections. The first, ‘Perspectives and Approaches’, accessibly explains a variety of frameworks through which the relationship between law and society is addressed and understood, with emphasis on contemporary perspectives that are relatively new to many socio-legal scholars. Following the book’s overall interest in social justice, the entries in this section of the book show how conceptual tools originate in, and help to illuminate, real-world issues. The second and largest section of the book (42 short well-written pieces) presents reflections on topics or areas concerning law, justice, and society that are inherently interdisciplinary and that are relevance to current – but also classical – struggles around justice. Informing readers about the lineage of ideas that are used or could be used today for research and activism, the book attends to the full range of local, national and transnational issues in law and society. The authors were carefully chosen to achieve a diverse and non-Eurocentric view of socio-legal studies.

This volume will be invaluable for law students, those in inter-disciplinary programs such as law and society, justice studies and legal studies, and those with interests in law, but based in other social sciences. It will also appeal to general readers interested in questions of justice and rights, including activists and advocates around the world.

part I|60 pages

Contemporary perspectives and approaches

chapter 2|6 pages

Critical Legal Studies

A curious case of hegemony without dominance

chapter 3|5 pages

Critical Race Theory

Emergence and new lines of inquiry

chapter 4|5 pages

Feminism

chapter 6|6 pages

Indigenous Law

What non-indigenous people can learn from indigenous legal thought

chapter 7|4 pages

Liberalism

chapter 8|6 pages

Postcolonial Legal Studies

chapter 10|8 pages

Transnational Governance and Law

Global security and socio-legal studies

part II|186 pages

Sites of engagement

chapter 12|3 pages

Animals

chapter 14|5 pages

Capitalism and Capital

chapter 15|4 pages

Censorship

State control of expression

chapter 16|4 pages

Cities and Urbanization

chapter 17|4 pages

Citizenship

chapter 18|4 pages

Class and Economic Inequality

chapter 19|5 pages

Climate Justice

chapter 20|5 pages

Corporations

chapter 21|7 pages

Data

chapter 22|5 pages

Domestic Work

Transnational regulation

chapter 23|4 pages

Extractivism

Socio-legal approaches to relations with lands and resources

chapter 24|4 pages

Finance, Banking and Debt

chapter 26|4 pages

Gender and Law

chapter 27|4 pages

Genocide

chapter 28|4 pages

Human Rights

Challenging universality

chapter 30|4 pages

Imperialism and Law

chapter 31|4 pages

Incarceration

How to understand imprisonment trends

chapter 32|4 pages

Indicators

Socio-legal dimensions of quantification

chapter 33|4 pages

Indigeneity

Making and contesting the concept

chapter 34|4 pages

Infrastructure

Socio-legal aspects of a key word of our time

chapter 35|4 pages

Islamic Law and the State

chapter 36|4 pages

Jurisdiction

chapter 37|5 pages

Labour and Employment

chapter 38|5 pages

Legal Consciousness

chapter 39|5 pages

Migration

chapter 40|6 pages

Ownership

Persons, property, and community 1

chapter 41|6 pages

Ownership of Intangibles

Intellectual property and the contested commons

chapter 43|4 pages

Settler Colonialism

chapter 44|4 pages

Sexuality

chapter 45|4 pages

Sovereignty

chapter 46|4 pages

Space and Belonging

chapter 47|5 pages

Supply Chains and Logistics

chapter 48|4 pages

Territory and Law

chapter 50|3 pages

Water Disputes Across Borders