This interdisciplinary and international 'curated conversation' focuses on the relationship between time, law and social ordering. Participants were drawn from law, sociology and anthropology in the UK, Canada and the Netherlands. Their research is inspired by, and engaged with, feminist theory, post- or anti-colonial perspectives and/or critical race theory. In an extended written conversation lasting several days (and later edited), participants reflected on how questions of time have emerged in their research, the ways in which they have struggled with conceptual or methodological dilemmas to do with analysing time in relation to law or social ordering. The conversation focused in particular on how constructions of race are co-imbricated...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential - yet to a large extent implicit - relations...
On 17 May 2016 Lucy Welsh interviewed Annelise Riles about her work on the relationship between law ...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
This interdisciplinary and international 'curated conversation' focuses on the relationship between ...
Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection...
In bringing together this collection on law’s relationship with time, our concern has been to regis...
Differences between, and struggles over, plural forms of time and temporal categories is a crucial y...
In the last decade, the changing role of time in society has once again taken centre stage in the ac...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
Book synopsis: This collection brings together a range of international contributors to stimulate di...
In his "Theses On the Philosophy of History" (1940), Walter Benjamin called for a blasting open of t...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential - yet to a large extent implicit - relations...
On 17 May 2016 Lucy Welsh interviewed Annelise Riles about her work on the relationship between law ...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
This interdisciplinary and international 'curated conversation' focuses on the relationship between ...
Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection...
In bringing together this collection on law’s relationship with time, our concern has been to regis...
Differences between, and struggles over, plural forms of time and temporal categories is a crucial y...
In the last decade, the changing role of time in society has once again taken centre stage in the ac...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
The concept of time is often understood in a ‘linear’ manner: time is going in one direction from th...
Book synopsis: This collection brings together a range of international contributors to stimulate di...
In his "Theses On the Philosophy of History" (1940), Walter Benjamin called for a blasting open of t...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential - yet to a large extent implicit - relations...
On 17 May 2016 Lucy Welsh interviewed Annelise Riles about her work on the relationship between law ...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...