The Locator -- [(title = "Normativity")]

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Author:
Banakar, Reza, author. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n95114413
Title:
Normativity in legal sociology : methodological reflections on law and regulation in late modernity / Reza Banakar.
Publisher:
Springer,
Copyright Date:
2015
Description:
x, 292 pages ; 24 cm
Subject:
Sociological jurisprudence.
Law and economic development.
Law and globalization.
International law.
International law.
Law and economic development.
Law and globalization.
Sociological jurisprudence.
Notes:
Collection of texts partly published previously. Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Chapter 2: Conflict and Competition between Law and Sociology -- Chapter 3: Social Scientific Studies of Law -- Chapter 4: Whose Experience is the Measure of Justice? -- Chapter 5: On the Paradoxes of Contextualisation -- Chapter 6: A Note on Franz Kafka?s Concept of Law -- Chapter 7: The Politics of Legal Cultures -- Chapter 8: Comparative Law and Legal Cultures -- Chapter 9: A Case-Study of Non-Western Legal Systems and Cultures -- Chapter 10: The Shift to Risk Management -- Chapter 11: Norms and Normativity in Socio-Legal Research -- Chapter 12: The Changing Horizons of Law and Regulation -- Chapter 13: Law and Regulation in Late Modernity.
Summary:
The field of socio-legal research has encountered three fundamental challenges over the last three decades ? it has been criticized for paying insufficient attention to legal doctrine, for failing to develop a sound theoretical foundation and for not keeping pace with the effects of the increasing globalization and internationalization of law, state and society. This book examines these three challenges from a methodological standpoint. It addresses the first two by demonstrating that legal sociology has much to say about justice as a kind of social experience and has always engaged theoretically with forms of normativity, albeit on its own empirical terms rather than on legal theory?s analytical terms. The book then explores the third challenge, a result of the changing nature of society, by highlighting the move from the industrial relations of early modernity to the post-industrial conditions of late modernity, an age dominated by information technology. It poses the question whether socio-legal research has sufficiently reassessed its own theoretical premises regarding the relationship between law, state and society, so as to grasp the new social and cultural forms of organization specific to the twenty-first century?s global societies.
ISBN:
3319096494
9783319096490
OCLC:
(OCoLC)898121824
LCCN:
2014956568
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

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