ch. 7. Biological anthropology in its relation to the anthropology of law-- ch. 1. Anthropology of law as a science -- ch. 2. History, schools, and names of anthropology of law -- ch. 3. Basic concepts -- ch. 4. Social norms (the theory of fora: law, morals, customs, etiquette, habits, religious norms, political force, conscience) -- ch. 5. Theories of culture and cultures -- ch. 6. Analyses in cultural anthropology -- ch. 7. Biological anthropology in its relation to the anthropology of law-- ch. 13. Jurisdiction. Procedure and dispute settlement. Conflict of laws (the anthropology of jurisdictional justice, of procedural justice and of conflicts justice) -- ch. 8. Kinship patterns and other anthropological aspects of family and gender -- ch. 9. Societal order, personhood, and human rights (the anthropology of constitutional justice) -- ch. 10. Reciprocity, exchange, gifts, contracting, trust (the anthropology of commutative justice) -- ch. 11. Possession, ownership, probate; market and non-market economics; antitrust; cultural property and heritage of mankind) the anthropology of distributive justice) -- ch. 12. Torts, crimes, sanctions. Witchcraft and related issues (the anthropology of compensatory or retributive justice) -- ch. 13. Jurisdiction. Procedure and dispute settlement. Conflict of laws (the anthropology of jurisdictional justice, of procedural justice and of conflicts justice) -- ch. 16. Applied anthropology of law. ch. 14. Native American law -- ch. 15. Other ethnic groups. The international law of indigenous peoples. Global human rights -- ch. 16. Applied anthropology of law.
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