This article explores the strategies underlying the Pop-Up Museum of Legal Objects, a project based on two collaborative events in which design-based practices were deployed to further socio-legal research. Like other endeavours focusing on legal objects, the Pop-Up project produced a collection of object-based commentaries of diverse geographical, historical and material origins – from Australia to Canada to Egypt, 1200 BCE to the present day, bark to gold to plastic. What renders the Pop-Up project distinctive among interventions in the ever-deepening legal object landscape is, first, that it aims not only to generate new knowledge about objects and about law, but also to transform research behaviours; and, second, that it pursues those a...
The last three decades have witnessed in Europe an increasing interest from institutions, and creati...
This article aims to discuss the position of art and design artifacts, and their creation, in a prac...
Human-Centred Design approaches in museums give rise to a new, digital cultural heritage design prac...
In this moment of ‘social distancing’ the need for sociologically-informed approaches to understandi...
This book is the first to explore what design can do for sociolegal research. It argues that designe...
This paper offers an integrated introduction to how, conceptually, to think about what design can d...
This chapter provides an introduction to research design in sociology of law by describing the stage...
This paper draws the attention of impact-curious sociolegal researchers to the potential of particip...
This article aims to discuss the position of art and design artifacts, and their creation, in a prac...
This paper aims at discussing the positions of art and design artefacts and their making in a practi...
Legal design could and should be more sociolegal. Sociolegal research can offer conceptual framework...
This research is part of the project Creative Agency and Religious Minorities: Hidden Galleries in t...
A project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council as part of its Digital Transformations ...
Qualitative data obtained by this researcher to date suggests ambiguity and uncertainty in design re...
Communicating legal concepts requires creativity and community-informed design, even— especially—whe...
The last three decades have witnessed in Europe an increasing interest from institutions, and creati...
This article aims to discuss the position of art and design artifacts, and their creation, in a prac...
Human-Centred Design approaches in museums give rise to a new, digital cultural heritage design prac...
In this moment of ‘social distancing’ the need for sociologically-informed approaches to understandi...
This book is the first to explore what design can do for sociolegal research. It argues that designe...
This paper offers an integrated introduction to how, conceptually, to think about what design can d...
This chapter provides an introduction to research design in sociology of law by describing the stage...
This paper draws the attention of impact-curious sociolegal researchers to the potential of particip...
This article aims to discuss the position of art and design artifacts, and their creation, in a prac...
This paper aims at discussing the positions of art and design artefacts and their making in a practi...
Legal design could and should be more sociolegal. Sociolegal research can offer conceptual framework...
This research is part of the project Creative Agency and Religious Minorities: Hidden Galleries in t...
A project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council as part of its Digital Transformations ...
Qualitative data obtained by this researcher to date suggests ambiguity and uncertainty in design re...
Communicating legal concepts requires creativity and community-informed design, even— especially—whe...
The last three decades have witnessed in Europe an increasing interest from institutions, and creati...
This article aims to discuss the position of art and design artifacts, and their creation, in a prac...
Human-Centred Design approaches in museums give rise to a new, digital cultural heritage design prac...