توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب :
خوانش های روتلج در مورد قانون و عدالت اجتماعی: سلب مالکیت، حاشیه نشینی، حقوق برخی از بهترین مقالات در مورد عدالت اجتماعی، حقوق و سیاست عمومی را ارائه می دهد. با یک مقدمه واضح جدید، طیف وسیعی از مسائل را پوشش می دهد و راهنمای قانع کننده ای برای درک حقوق و مطالعات اجتماعی- حقوقی در جنوب آسیا ارائه می دهد. این کتاب موضوعات انتقادی مانند فقه حقوق، عدالت، کرامت، با تمرکز بر رژیم های مردسالاری، کار و سلب مالکیت را پوشش می دهد. چهارده فصل این جلد، که به سه بخش تقسیم شده است، به بررسی مکانهای مورد مناقشه قانون اساسی، دادگاهها، زندانها، زمین و فرآیندهای پیچیده مهاجرت، قاچاق، رژیمهای فناوری دیجیتال، نشانههای جغرافیایی و درهمتنیدگیهای آنها میپردازد. این جلد چند رشتهای، سیاست و زندگیهای چندگانه حقوق/در حقوق را با گنجاندن دیدگاههایی از نویسندگان اصلی که به گفتمان دانشگاهی و/یا سیاستی این موضوع کمک کردهاند، پیشزمینه میکند.
این کتاب برای دانشجویان، دانش پژوهان، سیاست گذاران و دست اندرکاران علاقه مند به درک دقیق حقوق، به ویژه کسانی که حقوق، حاشیه نشینی و خشونت را مطالعه می کنند، مفید خواهد بود. این کتاب برای کسانی که در رشته حقوق، مطالعات اجتماعی و حقوقی، تاریخ حقوقی، مطالعات آسیای جنوبی، حقوق بشر، فقه و مطالعات قانون اساسی، مطالعات جنسیتی، تاریخ، سیاست، مطالعات درگیری و صلح، جامعه شناسی و انسان شناسی اجتماعی هستند، خواندنی ضروری است. همچنین برای مورخان حقوقی و شاغلین حقوق و کسانی که در مدیریت دولتی، مطالعات توسعه، مطالعات محیطی، مطالعات مهاجرت، مطالعات فرهنگی، مطالعات کار و اقتصاد هستند، جذاب خواهد بود.
فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Endorsement Page
Half-Title Page
Routledge Readings
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Exploring the Contours of Interdisciplinary Law
Section 1: Law, Development, and Social Justice
Representing Justice, Intersectionality, and Interpretive Communities
States of Exception, Lawfare, and Self-Determination
Vernacularization, Demosprudence, and Justice Claims
Ecologies of Justice and Belonging
Technology, Development, and Social Justice
Section 2: Constitutions, Precarity, Dispossession
Colonialism, Insurgency, Exodus, and the Constitution
The Discourse on Terror
Self-Rule, Satyagraha, and Annihilation of Caste
Pandemic Governance
The Gendered Habitations of Precarity
Gender Plurality and Diversity
Choice, Honour, and (Anticipation of) Violence
Precarity – Livelihoods and Laws
Disobedient Bodies
Property, Dispossessions, and Spatial Justice
Land, Women, and Property
Urban and Rural Landscapes
Dispossession, Knowledge, Emplacement
Conclusion
Notes
Cases Cited
References
Part I Colonialism, Insurgency, Exodus, and the Constitution
1 Law and Terror in the Age of Constitution-Making
I
II
III
IV
Acknowledgements
Notes
References
2 The Gandhian Conception of the Constitution
Hind Swaraj
Aundh Experiment
The Constitution of Aundh
Solitary Experiment in Gandhian Philosophy
Sriman Narayan’s Exposition of Gandhian Constitution
Scientific Examination of Gandhian Philosophy
New Definition of Ramrajya
Function of the Panchayats
Judiciary and Election System
The Princely States and the Minority Question
Taxation and National Wealth
The Open Jail
Acknowledgements
Notes
3 On the Fringe: The Tribal Laws
Why Discuss Them?
What is Tribal Law?
Tribal Law as Customary Law
India’s Tribal North-East
The Texture of the Discourse
The Specificity of the Tribal North-East
The Evolution of the Justice System in the North-East
The Plural Justice System
The Codification Project
The Issue of Women’s Rights
Tribal Laws and Globalisation
Note
References
4 Law, Rights, and Public Policy
The Impact on Civil Liberties
The Perception of Restricted Civil Liberties
Free Speech and Fake News
Privacy and Public Safety
Governments and Fundamental Rights
Notes
References
Part II Gendered Habitations of Precarity
5 The Trajectories of Work, Sexuality and Citizenship: The Rights of the Transgender in India
State, Identity and Rights of Transgender People
The Indian State and Rights to Sexuality: IPC S. 377
The State and Transgender Citizens: Violation of Civil and Constitutional Rights
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
6 ‘Vimla to Pagal Hai!’ [Vimla is a Lunatic!]
Notes
References
7 Legitimating Love: Tis Hazari and the Judicial Process
‘Steel-proof’ Marriages
Tis Hazari
The process of court-marriage
The role of the lawyers and touts
Processes of social legitimation
Note on court data
Samina
Rashmi
Durga
Legal and Social Ambivalence
Notes
References
8 A Legal Framework to Prevent Trafficking of Women and Young Girls During Disasters in India
Relationship between Disaster and Human Trafficking
Modalities for Disaster Risk Reduction
Combating Human Trafficking: International Dimensions
Strong Constitution and Weak Enforcement in Combating Human Trafficking in India
The DMA 2005 needs to resonate with women and girls
A Way Forward: Combating HumanTrafficking in Women and Young Girls in the Context of Disaster
Preparedness against trafficking
Lessons from Vulnerabilities Encountered During Disasters
Post-disaster stage
Notes
References
9 Victims, Whores, and Wives: Migrant Women and the Law
Moral Regulation of Migrant Women in and Through Law
Sex Work and Anti-trafficking Interventions
Economic Regulation of Migrant Women in and Through Law
Organised Sector
The Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 (ERA 1976)
Maternity Benefits Act (MBA), 1961
Unorganised Sector
Interstate Migrant Workmen (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Services Act (ISMWA), 1979
Building and Other Construction Workers (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Services) Act (BCWA), 1996
Legal Regulation of Domestic Work
Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Act, 2008
Nationalism, New Economic Policies and Female Migrants
Acknowledgement
Notes
References
Cases
Part III Property, Dispossessions, and Spatial Justice
10 ‘Bargaining’, Gender Equality and Legal Change: The Case of India’s Inheritance Laws
Bargaining with the State: an Analytical Framework
Inheritance Laws Before and Under the HSA, 1956
Unequal shares
Agricultural land
Formulation of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956
Bargaining Power: The Enabling Factors
Acting as a group, and the group’s size and cohesiveness
Support from the State
Support from civil society groups, social reformers, etc.
Entrenched property and political structures
Social perceptions
Social norms
Contemporary Efforts at Reforming Inheritance Laws
The Pre-December 2004 Situation
Acting as a group, and the group’s size and cohesiveness
Support from the State
Support from civil society groups
Entrenched property and political structures
Social perceptions and social norms
Developments since December 2004
In Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Notes
References
11 Production of Space in Urban India: Legal and Policy Challenges to Land Assembly
Introduction
Land Records in Urban India
Individual-led Forms of Producing Spaces
State-led Modes of Producing Urban Spaces
Conclusion
Notes
References
12 Rural Civilities: Caste, Gender, and Public Life in Kerala
Is there an Indian Public? Multiple Publics, Gender, Caste
Civility, gender, and space
Progressive Civility
The rural library
Private-Publics
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
Funding
Notes
Bibliography
13 The New Technologies and the Constitution of ‘Theft’
I PR Law and the Real World of Computer Viruses
The Right to Property
The Strange Case of Digital Sampling
Grey Zones of Copyright in India
Can Culture be Copyrighted?
Notes
References
14 The Geographical Indications Act: Place Matters
Registration of Geographical Indications Goods
Growth and Spatial Distribution
Classification of Geographical Indications
Nomenclature for Geographical Indications
Difference between Goods from a Place and Place Goods
Reference
توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب به زبان اصلی :
Routledge Readings on Law and Social Justice: Dispossessions, Marginalities, Rights presents some of the finest essays on social justice, rights and public policy. With a lucid new Introduction, it covers a vast range of issues and offers a compelling guide to understanding law and socio- legal studies in South Asia. The book covers critical themes such as the jurisprudence of rights, justice, dignity, with a focus on the regimes of patriarchy, labour and dispossession. The fourteen chapters in the volume, divided into three sections, examine contested sites of the constitution, courts, prisons, land and complex processes of migration, trafficking, digital technology regimes, geographical indications and their entanglements. This multidisciplinary volume foregrounds the politics and plural lives of/ in law by including perspectives from major authors who have contributed to the academic and/ or policy discourse of the subject.
This book will be useful to students, scholars, policymakers and practitioners interested in a nuanced understanding of law, especially those studying law, marginality and violence. It will serve as essential reading for those in law, socio- legal studies, legal history, South Asian studies, human rights, jurisprudence and constitutional studies, gender studies, history, politics, conflict and peace studies, sociology and social anthropology. It will also appeal to legal historians and practitioners of law, and those in public administration, development studies, environmental studies, migration studies, cultural studies, labour studies and economics.