Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection aims to put law and time scholarship into wider context, advancing conversations on time and temporalities between socio-legal scholars, anthropologists, sociologists, geographers and historians. Through a diverse range of contributions, the collection explores how legal modalities of time emerge and have effects within wider clusters of social and political action. Themes include: law’s diverse roles in maintaining linear historicist models of time; law’s participation in the materialisation of times; and the unsteady effects of temporal pluralism and polytemporalities in law. De-naturalising the ‘time’ in law and time scholarship, this col...
The main point of that article is to consider the axiological aspect of legal temporality. The presu...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
This article claims that legal time has excluded and submerged an important sense of time inside str...
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...
In the last decade, the changing role of time in society has once again taken centre stage in the ac...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
This interdisciplinary and international 'curated conversation' focuses on the relationship between ...
peer reviewedThe speech inquires into the links which exist between the concepts of time and law, an...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential – yet to a large extent implicit – relations...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential - yet to a large extent implicit - relations...
The most influential legal philosophies—notably legal positivism—tend to draw a sharp epistemologica...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
The main point of that article is to consider the axiological aspect of legal temporality. The presu...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
This article claims that legal time has excluded and submerged an important sense of time inside str...
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...
In the last decade, the changing role of time in society has once again taken centre stage in the ac...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
This essay addresses perceptions of time and temporality in legal rules and in legal knowledge under...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
This interdisciplinary and international 'curated conversation' focuses on the relationship between ...
peer reviewedThe speech inquires into the links which exist between the concepts of time and law, an...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential – yet to a large extent implicit – relations...
This book explores the close, complex and consequential - yet to a large extent implicit - relations...
The most influential legal philosophies—notably legal positivism—tend to draw a sharp epistemologica...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
The main point of that article is to consider the axiological aspect of legal temporality. The presu...
International audienceFor people committed to a given course of action, the objectivity of social fa...
This article claims that legal time has excluded and submerged an important sense of time inside str...