ABSTRACT

This book is the first legal geography book to explicitly engage in method. It complements this by also bringing together different perspectives on the emerging school of legal geography. It explores human–environment interactions and showcases distinct environmental legal geography scholarship.

Legal Geography: Perspectives and Methods is an innovative book concerned with a new relational and material way of examining our legal-spatial world. With chapters examining natural resource management, Indigenous knowledge and political ecology scholarship, the text introduces legal geography’s modes of analysis and critique. The book explores topics such as Indigenous environmental rights, the impacts of extractive industries, mediation of climate change, food, animal and plant patents, fossil fuels, mining and coastal environments based on empirical, jurisdictional and methodological insights from Australia, New Zealand and the Asia-Pacific to demonstrate how space and place are invoked in legal processes and contestations, and the methods that may be employed to explore these processes and contestations.

This book examines the role of legal geographies in the 21st century beyond the simple “law in action”, and it will thus appeal to students of socio-legal studies, human geography, environmental studies, environmental policy, as well as politics and international relations.

part 2|91 pages

Investigating the legal geographies of Indigenous peoples and local communities and their environments

chapter 3|21 pages

Asserting land rights through technology and democratic expression

The effect of the Indigenous Peoples Alliance of the Archipelago v Indonesia case

chapter 5|17 pages

Patent landscaping for Vanuatu

Specific legal geographic methods for Indigenous knowledge protection and promotion

chapter 6|17 pages

Consulting the consultators

A Kaupapa Māori-informed approach to uncovering Indigenous jurisdiction and shifting the research gaze

part 3|88 pages

Investigating the legal geographies of regulation

chapter 7|17 pages

Inside-outside

An interrogation of coastal climate change adaptation through the gaze of ‘the lawyer’

chapter 8|19 pages

Legal geography – place, time, law and method

The spatial and the archival in “Connection to Country”

chapter 9|18 pages

Comparative legal geography

Context and place in “legal transplants”

chapter 10|18 pages

The other is us

Conservation, categories and the law

chapter 11|14 pages

Ask an “expert”

Phenomenology and key informant interviews as a research method in legal geography

part 4|82 pages

Investigating the legal geographies of extractive industries

chapter 12|20 pages

Sydney’s drinking water catchment

A legal geographical analysis of coal mining and water security

chapter 13|19 pages

Lawyers in legal geography

Parliamentary submissions and coal seam gas in Australia

chapter 14|18 pages

Energising the law

Greening of fossil fuels and the rise of gendered political subjects

part 5|20 pages

In memoriam

chapter 16|18 pages

Space, scale and jurisdiction in health service provision for drug users

The legal geography of a supervised injecting facility

part 6|6 pages

Conclusion

chapter 17|4 pages

Conclusion

Legal geography futures