As legal study adopts more interdisciplinary approaches and assimilates with other disciplines such as sociology, politics and business, there is a growing need to pay greater attention to the research methods and methodologies from across the academic spectrum. Doing so creates opportunities to borrow and employ methodological techniques and insights from disciplines across the spectrum of the social sciences. In this work I examine how socio-legal methodologies may be informed by approaches within the wider social sciences and explore how borrowed elements such as research ethics, reflexivity, and positionality, can be understood and utilized within interdisciplinary, desk-based, socio-legal research. I do so using the example of a projec...
There is a distinct place for legal doctrinal methods in legal interdisciplinary research methodolog...
Since the mid-2000s, scholars have paid considerable attention to the interface between intellectual...
textabstractIntro: To a growing extent, legal scholars seem to be dissatisfied with established disc...
As legal study adopts more interdisciplinary approaches and assimilates with other disciplines such ...
Existing methodological approaches to business and human rights frequently fail to address the broad...
Since 1948, the study of human rights has been dominated by legal scholarship that has sought to inv...
Legal research and legal writing are often informed by preconceptions closely tied to mainstream leg...
This paper discusses the merits of a multidisciplinary approach to human rights. Since 1945, the bui...
This briefing document has been prepared for the Nuffield Foundation project on ‘Access to Justice f...
Drawing on a range of approaches from the social sciences and humanities, this handbook explores the...
This chapter seeks to outline a future research agenda for social rights that (a) reclaims social ri...
This chapter seeks to outline a future research agenda for social rights that (a) reclaims social ri...
In the past decades, there has been a rapid increase of interdisciplinary research with regard to la...
This chapter provides an introduction to research design in sociology of law by describing the stage...
There are increasing calls for academics to abandon "traditional" disciplinary research and to engag...
There is a distinct place for legal doctrinal methods in legal interdisciplinary research methodolog...
Since the mid-2000s, scholars have paid considerable attention to the interface between intellectual...
textabstractIntro: To a growing extent, legal scholars seem to be dissatisfied with established disc...
As legal study adopts more interdisciplinary approaches and assimilates with other disciplines such ...
Existing methodological approaches to business and human rights frequently fail to address the broad...
Since 1948, the study of human rights has been dominated by legal scholarship that has sought to inv...
Legal research and legal writing are often informed by preconceptions closely tied to mainstream leg...
This paper discusses the merits of a multidisciplinary approach to human rights. Since 1945, the bui...
This briefing document has been prepared for the Nuffield Foundation project on ‘Access to Justice f...
Drawing on a range of approaches from the social sciences and humanities, this handbook explores the...
This chapter seeks to outline a future research agenda for social rights that (a) reclaims social ri...
This chapter seeks to outline a future research agenda for social rights that (a) reclaims social ri...
In the past decades, there has been a rapid increase of interdisciplinary research with regard to la...
This chapter provides an introduction to research design in sociology of law by describing the stage...
There are increasing calls for academics to abandon "traditional" disciplinary research and to engag...
There is a distinct place for legal doctrinal methods in legal interdisciplinary research methodolog...
Since the mid-2000s, scholars have paid considerable attention to the interface between intellectual...
textabstractIntro: To a growing extent, legal scholars seem to be dissatisfied with established disc...