In this article, we seek to develop socio-legal studies through arupturing of the ideas behind the social and the legal, ideas that aremost often presumed to exist and are used to explain that which isalready there. The ubiquity of law and the omniscience of society havebecome givens. We use a product called shared ownership as a casestudy, arguing that the product was given life by a legal document (thelease) which itself represented the translation of a range of differentperspectives and audiences (albeit not the consumer), and which, itself,has been translated, most notably in a 2008 High Court decision. Thatdecision counterintuitively found that the lease had created an assuredshorthold tenancy (albeit a long one) but, despite its threa...
Most revolutions are noisy, tumultuous affairs. This is as true of significant shifts in legal doctr...
This Article seeks to answer a question that has become increasingly more important as commerce move...
In this Article, I demonstrate that anonymity has been misconceived as an aspect of privacy, and tha...
In this article, we seek to develop socio-legal studies through a rupturing of the ideas behind the ...
In this article, we seek to develop socio-legal studies through a rupturing of the ideas behind the ...
This article commences with an introduction to the use of Hegel’s famous dialectical method as an ar...
This Article initiates an account of “things” in the law, including both conceptual things and mater...
Legal fictions contain embedded nuggets of information about social reality and reveal important asp...
The paper deals with the problem of the consumer protection under the law of contract and the law o...
This essay explores the possibility of applying narrative analysis as a tool for the socio-cultural ...
This paper has, then, two major themes. In the first part I hope to elucidate the relationship of po...
Owning Culture demonstrates how the fabric of social life in most Western countries—and increasingly...
The ecological movement questions the productivist model our societies inherited from the Industrial...
This thesis examines a number of events which are usually understood to act as methods by which peop...
Work product is the legal doctrine that central casting would send over. First, it boasts profunditi...
Most revolutions are noisy, tumultuous affairs. This is as true of significant shifts in legal doctr...
This Article seeks to answer a question that has become increasingly more important as commerce move...
In this Article, I demonstrate that anonymity has been misconceived as an aspect of privacy, and tha...
In this article, we seek to develop socio-legal studies through a rupturing of the ideas behind the ...
In this article, we seek to develop socio-legal studies through a rupturing of the ideas behind the ...
This article commences with an introduction to the use of Hegel’s famous dialectical method as an ar...
This Article initiates an account of “things” in the law, including both conceptual things and mater...
Legal fictions contain embedded nuggets of information about social reality and reveal important asp...
The paper deals with the problem of the consumer protection under the law of contract and the law o...
This essay explores the possibility of applying narrative analysis as a tool for the socio-cultural ...
This paper has, then, two major themes. In the first part I hope to elucidate the relationship of po...
Owning Culture demonstrates how the fabric of social life in most Western countries—and increasingly...
The ecological movement questions the productivist model our societies inherited from the Industrial...
This thesis examines a number of events which are usually understood to act as methods by which peop...
Work product is the legal doctrine that central casting would send over. First, it boasts profunditi...
Most revolutions are noisy, tumultuous affairs. This is as true of significant shifts in legal doctr...
This Article seeks to answer a question that has become increasingly more important as commerce move...
In this Article, I demonstrate that anonymity has been misconceived as an aspect of privacy, and tha...