What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issue’s themes of disruption, temporality and law and their interconnection. Questioning the deeper implications that an era of political, cultural and technological disruption has for law and society scholarship, the various contributions to the special issue are given in outline and drawn together. The broader point emerges that any linear conception of temporality must find itself disrupted not by technology itself but by a radical plurality of laws.</p
Confronting (1) Challenges in Need of Direct Response, how to react if, by inventing easy-to-use fac...
Law is a dynamic concept, which keeps on changing with time and place. It must change with changes i...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection...
In the last decade, the changing role of time in society has once again taken centre stage in the ac...
This Commentary disrupts technology disrupting law. It suggests that “disruption” is increasingly be...
In bringing together this collection on law’s relationship with time, our concern has been to regis...
none1noThe aim of this article is to reframe the debate on societal constitutionalism and constituti...
What happens to law when social institutions which ground its normativity become unstable and transi...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
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...
This article introduces three ideas that are central to understanding the ways in which law and lega...
This article, introducing a new extended form of the journal, offers some reflections on the changin...
Confronting (1) Challenges in Need of Direct Response, how to react if, by inventing easy-to-use fac...
Law is a dynamic concept, which keeps on changing with time and place. It must change with changes i...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...
What is the future for and of law and society scholarship? The Issue Editors here introduce the issu...
Research on law's relationship with time has flourished over the past decade. This edited collection...
In the last decade, the changing role of time in society has once again taken centre stage in the ac...
This Commentary disrupts technology disrupting law. It suggests that “disruption” is increasingly be...
In bringing together this collection on law’s relationship with time, our concern has been to regis...
none1noThe aim of this article is to reframe the debate on societal constitutionalism and constituti...
What happens to law when social institutions which ground its normativity become unstable and transi...
Much socio-legal scholarship assumes that even if experiences of law and time differ, people and law...
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...
This article introduces three ideas that are central to understanding the ways in which law and lega...
This article, introducing a new extended form of the journal, offers some reflections on the changin...
Confronting (1) Challenges in Need of Direct Response, how to react if, by inventing easy-to-use fac...
Law is a dynamic concept, which keeps on changing with time and place. It must change with changes i...
Joel Reidenberg in his 1998 Article Lex Informatica observed that technology can be a distinct regul...