Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 5-8 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
This thought-provoking book opens up a distinctive and original framework of analysis of the relationship between legal methodologies and the social and human sciences. Rich in implications both for comparative legal theory and for the understanding of legal reasoning in practice, it adopts a critical epistemological perspective by enlarging the focus of comparative legal studies and allowing for a much-needed decentering of conventional approaches to law across cultures and disciplines.Using a novel lens, leading scholars Horatia Muir Watt and Geoffrey Samuel explore modes of knowledge, reasoning and veridiction that are usually taken for granted within the law. They investigate interdisciplinary insights from areas as diverse as algorithmic governance, symmetrical anthropology or cinema studies to suggest alternative knowledge frameworks better attuned to our culturally diverse world. Building on well known examples from Roman law, private international law and contemporary orientations in legal comparison, they highlight both the resistance of traditional legal epistemology to transformative moves in other fields as well as how other areas of knowledge incorporate in turn contributions from legal doctrines and juridical argument.Producing Legal Knowledge is a beneficial read for scholars and students of comparative legal studies and legal epistemology, particularly those interested in legal research methods.
Horatia Muir Watt, Professor of Law, SciencesPo, Paris, France and Geoffrey Samuel, Professor Emeritus, Kent Law School, UK
ContentsPreface1 Introduction: comparative legal methodology in context PART I OVERVIEWIntroduction to Part I: Overview2 Threshold epistemological conundra 3 Comparative law’s conceptual language 4 Models of legal knowledge (1): the canon 5 Models of legal knowledge (2): further variations PART II SCHEMES OF INTELLIGIBILITYIntroduction to Part II: schemes of intelligility6 Causal scheme: an uncommon notion 7 Functional scheme: theory, heuristic, or just part of theproblem? 8 Structuralist scheme: preparing for the era of the ‘post-structuralist’?9 Hermeneutical scheme: what (if anything) is beyond the ‘text’? 10 Dialectical scheme: comparison, opposition and critique 11 Actionalist (and interactionalist) scheme: individuals, society,actor-networks 12 Ontologies and open conclusions Bibliography