This article is about time. It is about time, or more precisely, about the absence of time in law’s digital future. It is also about time travelling and the seemingly ever-popular BBC science fiction television series Doctor Who. Further, it is about law’s timefullness; about law’s pictorial past and the ‘visual baroque’ of its chronological fused future. Ultimately, it is about a time paradox of seeing time run to a time when time runs ‘No More!’ This ‘timey-wimey’ article is in three parts. The first part looks to a hazy remembered past of the legal emblem tradition as presented in Peter Goodrich’s Legal Emblems and the Art of Law to learn visual literacy and also to glimpse the essential elements of modern legality with authority, decisi...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
This chapter charts the demise of the paper archival system of modern law and envisions the key feat...
The main point of that article is to consider the axiological aspect of legal temporality. The presu...
This article is about time. It is about time, or more precisely, about the absence of time in law’s ...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This article claims that legal time has excluded and submerged an important sense of time inside str...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
Albert Camus’ reflection in The Myth of Sisyphus presents the absurd, the intrusion of the meaningle...
Despite being time-travel adventure series, both classic Doctor Who (1963-1989, 1996) and its reboot...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
Law, understood both in its abstractness and materiality, manifests itself as timeless category that...
In this article I will present two arguments. First, the argument that the time travel television se...
Time is everywhere in law. It shapes doctrines as disparate as ripeness and retroactivity, and it im...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
This chapter charts the demise of the paper archival system of modern law and envisions the key feat...
The main point of that article is to consider the axiological aspect of legal temporality. The presu...
This article is about time. It is about time, or more precisely, about the absence of time in law’s ...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This article claims that legal time has excluded and submerged an important sense of time inside str...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
Albert Camus’ reflection in The Myth of Sisyphus presents the absurd, the intrusion of the meaningle...
Despite being time-travel adventure series, both classic Doctor Who (1963-1989, 1996) and its reboot...
This article investigates the aesthetic of the twentieth-century Metropolitan Police box and its ong...
Law, understood both in its abstractness and materiality, manifests itself as timeless category that...
In this article I will present two arguments. First, the argument that the time travel television se...
Time is everywhere in law. It shapes doctrines as disparate as ripeness and retroactivity, and it im...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
This chapter charts the demise of the paper archival system of modern law and envisions the key feat...
The main point of that article is to consider the axiological aspect of legal temporality. The presu...