This Handbook brings together a collection of essays exploring the connections between law and anthropology. This title highlights the narrative of how law and anthropology have and should relate to each other in relation to immigration, international justice forums, and writing new national constitutions.
This Handbook brings together a collection of essays exploring the connections between law and anthropology. This title highlights the narrative of how law and anthropology have and should relate to each other in relation to immigration, international justice forums, and writing new national constitutions.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Global perspectives on law and anthropology
- 1: Carol Greenhouse: Social Control through Law: Critical afterlives
- 2: Martin Chanock: Anthropology, Law, and Empire: Foundations in context
- 3: Sindiso Mnisi Weeks: South African Legal Culture and its Dis/empowerment Paradox
- 4: Pratiksha Baxi: The Ethnographic Gaze on State Law in India
- 5: Paul Burke: The Anthropology of Indigenous Australia and Native Title Claims
- 6: Brian Thom: Encountering Indigenous Law in Canada
- 7: Florian Stammler, Aytalina Ivanova, and Brian Donahoe: Russian Legal Anthropology: From empirical ethnography to applied innovation
- 8: Armando Guevara Gil: Indigenous Peoples, Identity, and Free, Prior, and Informed Consultation in Latin America
- 9: Do Dom Kim: Rule of Law and Media in the Making of Legal Identity in Urban Southern China
- 10: Dominik Müller: Islam, Law, and the State
- 11: Keebet von Benda-Beckmann: Law and Anthropology in the Netherlands: From Adat Law School to Anthropology of Law
- 12: Frédéric Audren and Laetitia Guerlain: Legal Uses of Anthropology in France in the 19th and 20th centuries
- 13: Balacz Fekete: Legal Ethnology and Legal Anthropology in Hungary
- 14: Michele Graziadei: The Anthropology of European Law
- Recurring themes in law and anthropology
- 15: Elizabeth Mertz: Within and Beyond the Anthropology of Language and Law
- 16: Anne Griffiths: Law as an Enduring Concept: Space, time, and power
- 17: Fernanda Pirie: Legalism: Rules, categories, and texts
- 18: Günter Frankenberg: Legal Transfer
- 19: Thomas Duve: Legal Traditions
- 20: Baudouin Dupret: The Concept of Positive Law and its Relationship to Religion and Morality
- 21: Matthew Canfield: Property Regimes
- 22: Markus Böckenförde, Berihun Gebeye: Law and Development
- 23: Mark Goodale: Rights and Social Inclusion
- 24: Lynette Chua: Human Rights Activism, Sexuality, and Gender
- Anthropology in law and legal practice
- 25: Alison Dundes Renteln: The Cultural Defence
- 26: Andrzej Jakubowski: Cultural Rights and Cultural Heritage as a Global Concern
- 27: Faris Nasrallah: Alternative Dispute Resolution
- 28: Richard A. Wilson: Justice after Atrocity
- 29: Marie-Claire Foblets: Kinship through the Twofold Prism of Law and Anthropology
- 30: Dirk Hanschel, Elizabeth Steyn: Environmental Justice
- Anthropology at the limits of law
- 31: Felix-Anselm van Lier, Katrin Seidel: Constitution Making
- 32: Jennifer Burrell: Vigilantism and Security-making
- 33: Math Noortmann, Juliette Koning: The Normative Complexity of Private Security: Beyond legal regulation and stigmatization
- 34: Erica Bornstein: Humanitarian Interventions
- 35: Rita Kesselring: Inequality, Victimhood, and Redress
- 36: Katayoun Alidadi: Anti-discrimination Rules and Religious Minorities in the Workplace
- 37: Priscilla Claeys, Karine Peschard: Transnational Agrarian Movements, Food Sovereignty, and Legal Mobilization
- 38: Rachel Sieder: The Juridification of Politics
- 39: Meg Davis: The Persistence of Chinese Rights Defenders
- Current directions in law and anthropology
- 40: Sally Engle Merry: The Problem of Compliance and the Turn to Quantification
- 41: Bert Turner, Melanie Wiber: Law, Science, and Technologies
- 42: Olaf Zenker: Politics of Belonging
- 43: Katia Bianchini: Legal and Anthropological Approaches to International Refugee Law
- 44: Philipp Dann, Julia Eckert: Norm Creation Beyond the State
- 45: Didier Fassin: Critique of Punitive Reason
- 46: Maria Sapignoli, Ronald Niezen: Global Legal Institutions
- 47: Annelise Riles, Ralf Michaels: Law as Technique
- 48: Kamari Clarke: Emotion, Affect, and Law
- 49: Eve Darian-Smith: Legal Pluralism in Postcolonial, Postnational, and Postdemocratic Contexts