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Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism
Edited by Shauhin Talesh, Elizabeth Mertz and Heinz Klug
This insightful Research Handbook provides a definitive overview of the New Legal Realism (NLR) movement, reaching beyond historical and national boundaries to form new conversations. Drawing on deep roots within the law-and-society tradition, it demonstrates the powerful virtues of new legal realist research and its attention to the challenges of translation between social science and law. It explores an impressive range of contemporary issues including immigration, policing, globalization, legal education, and access to justice, concluding with and examination of how different social science disciplines intersect with NLR.
Handbook
- Published in print:
- 18 Mar 2021
- ISBN:
- 9781788117760
- eISBN:
- 9781788117777
- Pages:
- 544
Show Summary Details
- Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism
- Copyright
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Boxes
- Contributors
- Chapter 1: Introduction to the Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism
- Chapter 2: Realism then and now: Using the real world to inform formal law
- Chapter 3: East Coast Legal Realism and its progeny
- Chapter 4: From the periphery to the center and back? A brief history of Midwest Legal Realism
- Chapter 5: European New Legal Realism: Towards a basic science of law
- Chapter 6: Lessons for new Legal Realism from Africa and Latin America
- Chapter 7: Police violence in So Paulo: Between the asphalt and the hill
- Chapter 8: Police torture: A case for interdisciplinarity
- Chapter 9: A Legal Realist approach to black-on-black policing
- Chapter 10: Transgressing boundaries through new Legal Realist approaches: Affinity and collaboration within ethnographic research on immigration law and policy
- Chapter 11: Enacting immigration politics in a juridical register
- Chapter 12: Critical legal rhetoric takes on immigration and refugee law
- Chapter 13: New Legal Realism goes to law school: Integrating social science and law through legal education
- Chapter 14: Teaching an interdisciplinary law class
- Chapter 15: Ambition and reality: Reforms of legal studies at the Faculty of Law at the University of Copenhagen
- Chapter 16: New Legal Realism, eCRT, and the future of legal education scholarship
- Chapter 17: The uses and abuses of global social indicators
- Chapter 18: The life of the law has not been logic it has been experience: International legal ethnography and the New Legal Realism
- Chapter 19: The judicialization of politics?
- Chapter 20: A realist perspective on legal strategy in (the) practice
- Chapter 21: Access to justice
- Chapter 22: Planet of the insurers: How insurers shape and influence law and impact access to justice
- Chapter 23: Rendering rural property visible to law: A role for New Legal Realism
- Chapter 24: Urban property and housing rights in the time of the coronavirus
- Chapter 25: Anthropology
- Chapter 26: Sociology of Law and New Legal Realism
- Chapter 27: The pitfalls and promises of a New Legal Realism rooted in political science
- Chapter 28: Psychology and Legal Realism
- Chapter 29: Users guide to history
- Chapter 30: Jurisprudence and legal theory
- Chapter 31: Law as a discipline: Legal theory, interdisciplinary legal theory, and ways of speaking legitimacy to power
- Index
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Contents
Handbook Chapter
- Published:
- 18 March 2021
- Category:
- Handbook Chapter
- Pages:
- vii–ix (3 total)
Collection:
Law 2021
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- Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism
- Copyright
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Boxes
- Contributors
- Chapter 1: Introduction to the Research Handbook on Modern Legal Realism
- Chapter 2: Realism then and now: Using the real world to inform formal law
- Chapter 3: East Coast Legal Realism and its progeny
- Chapter 4: From the periphery to the center and back? A brief history of Midwest Legal Realism
- Chapter 5: European New Legal Realism: Towards a basic science of law
- Chapter 6: Lessons for new Legal Realism from Africa and Latin America
- Chapter 7: Police violence in So Paulo: Between the asphalt and the hill
- Chapter 8: Police torture: A case for interdisciplinarity
- Chapter 9: A Legal Realist approach to black-on-black policing
- Chapter 10: Transgressing boundaries through new Legal Realist approaches: Affinity and collaboration within ethnographic research on immigration law and policy
- Chapter 11: Enacting immigration politics in a juridical register
- Chapter 12: Critical legal rhetoric takes on immigration and refugee law
- Chapter 13: New Legal Realism goes to law school: Integrating social science and law through legal education
- Chapter 14: Teaching an interdisciplinary law class
- Chapter 15: Ambition and reality: Reforms of legal studies at the Faculty of Law at the University of Copenhagen
- Chapter 16: New Legal Realism, eCRT, and the future of legal education scholarship
- Chapter 17: The uses and abuses of global social indicators
- Chapter 18: The life of the law has not been logic it has been experience: International legal ethnography and the New Legal Realism
- Chapter 19: The judicialization of politics?
- Chapter 20: A realist perspective on legal strategy in (the) practice
- Chapter 21: Access to justice
- Chapter 22: Planet of the insurers: How insurers shape and influence law and impact access to justice
- Chapter 23: Rendering rural property visible to law: A role for New Legal Realism
- Chapter 24: Urban property and housing rights in the time of the coronavirus
- Chapter 25: Anthropology
- Chapter 26: Sociology of Law and New Legal Realism
- Chapter 27: The pitfalls and promises of a New Legal Realism rooted in political science
- Chapter 28: Psychology and Legal Realism
- Chapter 29: Users guide to history
- Chapter 30: Jurisprudence and legal theory
- Chapter 31: Law as a discipline: Legal theory, interdisciplinary legal theory, and ways of speaking legitimacy to power
- Index