توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Invisible Institutionalisms: Collective Reflections on the Shadows of Legal Globalisation
نام کتاب : Invisible Institutionalisms: Collective Reflections on the Shadows of Legal Globalisation
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : نهادگرایی های نامرئی: تأملات جمعی در سایه جهانی شدن قانونی
سری :
نویسندگان : Swethaa S Ballakrishnen, Sara Dezalay (editors)
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 319
ISBN (شابک) : 9781509930210 , 9781509930234
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 4 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Foreword: Marc Galanter\nAcknowledgements\nContents\nList of Contributors\nIntroduction Law, Globalisation and the Shadows of Legal Globalisation\n I. Law and Society: Finding and Making Communities\n II. The Long Table – Imagining Non-Structured Synergies in a Formal Setting\n III. Setting the Conversation: Confronting the Risks of Ubiquity, Babel and the Ruses of an Imperial Reason\n IV. Estrangement, Reflexivity and Refraction with/from Peripheral Sites:The Theme of the Long Table\n V. The Six Courses | Jumping Points\n VI. The Six Courses in Dialogue:Reflections, Shadows and Refractions\n VII. The Case for Conversational Thought Building\nCover Note\nCourse 1\n 1. G-local Women Power: Local Female Representation and Property Rights in India\n I. Speaking about Power\n II. Gatekeeper Theory\n III. Conclusion: How Equality Travels\n Archive Envy\n I. On Numbers\n II. Narrating Rights\n III. The Invisible and Hyper-Visible\nCourse 2\n 2. Of Footwear Clusters, Community Ties, and Institutional Tenacity\n I. The Hing Ki Mandi\n II. The Aadhatiya\n III. The Jatav\n IV. The Me and the Theory\n V. Hvilsager\n Three Paise and a Rough Agenda on How to Make the Invisible Visible\n Searching for Space: Creating Room in Global Studies\n I. Animation of Discrimination\n II. Making Sense of Nonsense\nCourse 3\n 3. The Law, the Visual and Access to Justice in the Colonial\rCourts of India\n I. Introduction\n II. Law, Visuality and Culture\n III. Ethnographic Work in the Three High Courts\n IV. Access to Justice\n V. Conclusion\n The Visual Culture of Law in India: A Response\n I. Situating Khorakiwala\'s Contribution\n II. Normativity and the \'Justice\' of Visual Culture\nCourse 4\n 4. Formalising Informal Innovation: Engendering an Epistemic Injustice?\n I. Introduction\n II. Definitional Issues\n III. Formalising Informality?\n IV. Conclusion\n Soliciting Testimony: The Challenge of Openness in the International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) Competition\n Are Informal Resilience and Formal Emancipation Necessarily Incompatible?\nCourse 5\n 5. Islamic Review in Pakistan: Problematising the Divide between\rShari’a Courts and their ‘Secular’ Counterparts\n I. Introduction\n II. Reflections on Positionality and \"Ground Up\" Theorising\n III. Islamic Constitutionalism in Pakistan\n IV. Complicating the Secular-Religious Binary\n V. Concluding Thoughts: Islamic Constitutionalism and Theories of Legal Globalisation\n Navigating Categories – Training, Positionality and Practice\n The Judicial, the Secular and Beyond: Multi-normative Practices\rof Pakistani Constitutional Courts\n I. Introduction: Neither Secularising nor Radicalising Agents\n II. Zooming Back and Forth: Macro- and Micro-Perspectives\n III. The Concept of Multi-Normativity\n IV. The Politics of Institutional Hybrids\n V. Invisible Institutionalism\nCourse 6\n 6. Competition Law in Latin America: 100 Years of Solitude\n Competition Law in Latin America: 100 Years of Solitude\n I. The Origins of Competition Law Regimes in Latin America\n II. Enforcement Effectiveness vs Citizen Empowerment: The Precarious Balance of Leniency Regimes in Latin America\n III. The Buendía Family: Enforcers and the Making of Latin American Competition Law Networks\n IV. Conclusions\n Mirrors, Mirages, and the Development Myth\nRefraction Notes\n A. Opportunism and Reflexivity: Researchers Playing Double\rAgents to Study the Double Game of National Legal Elites\rin International Competition\n B. Reflections on the Value, Risks, and Obligations of a Career as a Misfit\n I. Introduction\n II. Accounting for the Investment, and the Return\n III. Risks and Attendant Obligations\n C. Genealogy of a Globalised Socio-Legal (and Feminist) Scholar\n D. Learning to be a Legal Anthropologist\n I. Law and Globalisation – Challenging Modernist Assumptions\n II. Diversifying Scholarly Communities\n E. Living in the Contradiction: Globalisation and its Discontents\n F. Commuting between Academy and Social Movements: Reflections of an Insurgent Feminist\n I. Learning about Adivasi Rights\n II. Why Focus on Law?\n III. Adivasi Lawyers and Self Representation\n IV. By Way of Conclusion\n G. Ballakrishnen and Dezalay’s Feast: Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner\ron the Island of Misfit Toys\nConclusion: Reading Between the Lines\n I. Building a ‘Pure’ Gaze on the (In)Visible(S) ofLegal Globalisation\n II. From Subversion to Carving Outa Space for Critique about Legal Globalisation\n III. The Games of Dissonance\n IV. De Te Fabula Narratur\nIndex