Ubiquitous Law: Legal Theory and the Space for Legal Pluralism

Ubiquitous Law: Legal Theory and the Space for Legal Pluralism

by Emmanuel Melissaris
Ubiquitous Law: Legal Theory and the Space for Legal Pluralism

Ubiquitous Law: Legal Theory and the Space for Legal Pluralism

by Emmanuel Melissaris

eBook

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Overview

Ubiquitous Law explores the possibility of understanding the law in dissociation from the State while, at the same time, establishing the conditions of meaningful communication between various legalities. This book argues that the enquiry into the legal has been biased by the implicit or explicit presupposition of the State's exclusivity to a claim to legality as well as the tendency to make the enquiry into the law the task of experts, who purport to be able to represent the legal community's commitments in an authoritative manner. Very worryingly, the experts' point of view then becomes constitutive of the law and parasitic to and distortive of people's commitments. Ubiquitous Law counter-suggests a new methodology for legal theory, which will not be based on rigid epistemological and normative assumptions but rather on self-reflection and mutual understanding and critique, so as to establish acceptable differences on the basis of a commonality.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781317005704
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 02/17/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 178
File size: 17 MB
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About the Author

Emmanuel Melissaris is a Lecturer in Law at the London School of Economics, UK

Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction; Perspective, critique and pluralism in legal theory; Orthodoxies and heterodoxies of legal pluralism; On the theoretical groundwork of legal pluralism; Interperspectival critical legal theory; The contours of institutionalised legal discourse; Shared normative experiences and the space for legal pluralism; On the chronology (and topology) of the legal; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.
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