publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleInaugural lecture delivered at the SLSA Socio-Legal Studies and the Humanities Conference, at the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, London, 5 November 2008.Published version; Published online by Cambridge University Press. Copyright © Cambridge University Press, 2009. Available online at http://journals.cambridge.org/This paper was delivered as a plenary lecture, designed to respond to the one-day special conference focus upon links between socio-legal studies and the humanities. The paper focuses in particular upon the relationship between law and the humanities. It may be argued that the role of empirically sourced socio-legal research is well accepted, given its tangible utility in terms of ...