
Contents
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I. Introduction: A Two-Way Relationship between Social Theory and Legal Studies I. Introduction: A Two-Way Relationship between Social Theory and Legal Studies
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II. Scale Shifting in Legal Contexts: Beyond Jurisdiction II. Scale Shifting in Legal Contexts: Beyond Jurisdiction
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III. Beyond Space: The Work of Law’s Many Temporal Scales III. Beyond Space: The Work of Law’s Many Temporal Scales
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IV. The Materiality of Legal Actors and Processes IV. The Materiality of Legal Actors and Processes
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V. Does Law Have Moods? Narratives, Genres, and Affect V. Does Law Have Moods? Narratives, Genres, and Affect
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VI. Conclusion VI. Conclusion
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8 Deepening the Conversation between Socio-Legal Theory and Legal Scholarship about Jurisdiction
Get accessMariana Valverde has most recently written Chronotopes of Law: Jurisdiction, Scale and Governance (Routledge, 2015) and Michel Foucault (Routledge, 2017). For the past few years her main research focus has been the governance of urban development, especially infrastructure public-private partnerships.
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Published:04 October 2019
Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines the relationship between social theory and legal studies, paying close attention to the theoretical implications of specific legal technicalities by borrowing methodologies originating from non-legal disciplines. Social theorists who want to engage with and contribute to socio-legal scholarship can draw on actual legal quandaries and real-world governance dilemmas to help generate theoretical insights that may perhaps borrow their underlying epistemology from non-legal theorists, but that also draw substantially on close studies of legal processes, particularly the often-ignored theoretical significance of law’s own procedures and knowledge moves. The chapter then reveals how the substantial benefits may be derived from this genuine exercise in interdisciplinarity by harnessing considerations of scale, temporality, materiality, and narrative affect, as far as the jurisdiction is concerned.
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