Arising from the spatial turn in the social sciences, metaphors and material practices of movement have developed into methodological tools for studying the transitory moments of everyday life. This article explores how socio-legal scholars can use movement as method to trace law in the everyday of civic space. The research draws upon a project that explored how bodies, materials, concepts, and administrative processes are set in motion in the Beaney House of Art & Knowledge in Canterbury, England, where births and deaths are registered on the mezzanine floor of the municipal library, museum, and art gallery. The article teases out some of the challenges of journeying with law, in architectural settings where legal activity has not been exp...
The connection between law and the city is an increasingly topical area of interdisciplinary researc...
This chapter attempts an alternative spatial reading of the law from both a doctrinal and an interdi...
Protest, Property and the Commons focuses on the alternative property narratives of ‘social centres’...
This collection brings together a carefully curated selection of researchers from law, sociology, an...
In an increasingly diversifying society, public space is the quintessential social realm where membe...
This article considers the place of movement in common law and, in particular, the relation between ...
The aim of this article is to draw upon sacred/secular ‘journeying’ to explore the inherent movement...
There is now a well-established ‘spatial turn in law’. However, it remains oriented towards notions ...
Through an exploration in poetry, essay and photographs, I ask and interrogate the jurisprudential q...
© 2012 Dr. Olivia McLeod BarrDifferent offices carry different responsibilities. This thesis address...
This article aims to interrogate law's ambivalent relationship with urban space. It deals with the p...
Even in the digital age, lawyering is always located. Lawyers live and work in physical space, and t...
The present article examines the new position of social movements in constitutional settings. It arg...
Through a case study based in Bristol, this article explores how the ‘law of place’ has transformed ...
Book synopsis: This handbook sets out an innovative approach to the theory of law reconceptualising ...
The connection between law and the city is an increasingly topical area of interdisciplinary researc...
This chapter attempts an alternative spatial reading of the law from both a doctrinal and an interdi...
Protest, Property and the Commons focuses on the alternative property narratives of ‘social centres’...
This collection brings together a carefully curated selection of researchers from law, sociology, an...
In an increasingly diversifying society, public space is the quintessential social realm where membe...
This article considers the place of movement in common law and, in particular, the relation between ...
The aim of this article is to draw upon sacred/secular ‘journeying’ to explore the inherent movement...
There is now a well-established ‘spatial turn in law’. However, it remains oriented towards notions ...
Through an exploration in poetry, essay and photographs, I ask and interrogate the jurisprudential q...
© 2012 Dr. Olivia McLeod BarrDifferent offices carry different responsibilities. This thesis address...
This article aims to interrogate law's ambivalent relationship with urban space. It deals with the p...
Even in the digital age, lawyering is always located. Lawyers live and work in physical space, and t...
The present article examines the new position of social movements in constitutional settings. It arg...
Through a case study based in Bristol, this article explores how the ‘law of place’ has transformed ...
Book synopsis: This handbook sets out an innovative approach to the theory of law reconceptualising ...
The connection between law and the city is an increasingly topical area of interdisciplinary researc...
This chapter attempts an alternative spatial reading of the law from both a doctrinal and an interdi...
Protest, Property and the Commons focuses on the alternative property narratives of ‘social centres’...