Much legal-pluralist scholarship tends to naturalize the law of the context, treating that law as though it were inherent in social interaction, emerging spontaneously, without conscious human decision. This view overstates the role of agreement in human societies and mischaracterizes the nature of law, including non-state law. All law is concerned with establishing a collective set of norms against a backdrop of normative disagreement, not agreement. It necessarily contains mechanisms for bringing contention to a provisional close, imposing a collective solution. This article presents a theory of legal pluralism that takes human disagreement seriously. The theory retains four themes crucial to legal pluralism: the hermeneutic theme, the ...
Legal pluralism has become a major theme in socio-legal studies. However, under this very broad deno...
In [almost all of the analyses of global legal pluralism], which I have hitherto met with, I have al...
In this volume, we interrogate how human rights law and practice acquire meaning in contexts of lega...
Much legal-pluralist scholarship tends to naturalize the law of the context, treating that law as ...
This Article grapples with the complexities of law in a world of hybrid legal spaces, where a single...
Legal pluralism provides an alternative and very useful way of thinking about the legal as well as a...
Legal pluralism as a pre-modern and well-known phenomenon seemed to be domesticated by the 'modern s...
Legal pluralism stands in counterpoint to conceptions of l~ that sharply distinguish the legal from ...
This paper argues that analytical jurisprudence has been insufficiently attentive to three significa...
This article makes a theoretical argument for reimagining “the rule of law” in light of “legal plura...
Sociologically and normatively, the concept of legal pluralism presupposes a ‘legal system’ or a ‘la...
This essay suggests some promising fields for legal anthropological studies in matters of legal plur...
The intellectual tradition of legal pluralism characterizes itself by way of a contrast to legal cen...
Sionaidh Douglas-Scott's book, Law after Modernity, outlines a sophisticated theory of legal plurali...
The increasingly cosmopolitan nature of the nation-state, plus an increasing scepticism toward the m...
Legal pluralism has become a major theme in socio-legal studies. However, under this very broad deno...
In [almost all of the analyses of global legal pluralism], which I have hitherto met with, I have al...
In this volume, we interrogate how human rights law and practice acquire meaning in contexts of lega...
Much legal-pluralist scholarship tends to naturalize the law of the context, treating that law as ...
This Article grapples with the complexities of law in a world of hybrid legal spaces, where a single...
Legal pluralism provides an alternative and very useful way of thinking about the legal as well as a...
Legal pluralism as a pre-modern and well-known phenomenon seemed to be domesticated by the 'modern s...
Legal pluralism stands in counterpoint to conceptions of l~ that sharply distinguish the legal from ...
This paper argues that analytical jurisprudence has been insufficiently attentive to three significa...
This article makes a theoretical argument for reimagining “the rule of law” in light of “legal plura...
Sociologically and normatively, the concept of legal pluralism presupposes a ‘legal system’ or a ‘la...
This essay suggests some promising fields for legal anthropological studies in matters of legal plur...
The intellectual tradition of legal pluralism characterizes itself by way of a contrast to legal cen...
Sionaidh Douglas-Scott's book, Law after Modernity, outlines a sophisticated theory of legal plurali...
The increasingly cosmopolitan nature of the nation-state, plus an increasing scepticism toward the m...
Legal pluralism has become a major theme in socio-legal studies. However, under this very broad deno...
In [almost all of the analyses of global legal pluralism], which I have hitherto met with, I have al...
In this volume, we interrogate how human rights law and practice acquire meaning in contexts of lega...