Volume 21 of
Law Text Culture is out, and it contains much to interest our readers. Guest edited by my Berkeley Law colleague
Christopher Tomlins, the volume brings together essays presented at the most recent "Law As..." conference. The theme of that conference was "
Law As . . . Minor Jurisprudence in Historical Key." Here's the TOC.
Contents, Contributions and Introduction, LTC, volume 21 Christoper Tomlins
Law As … IV: Minor Jurisprudence in Historical Key. An Introduction Christopher Tomlins
How Strange the Change from Major to Minor Peter Goodrich
Making Sense of Minor Jurisprudence Mark Antaki
Manuel Quintín Lame: Legal Thought as Minor Jurisprudence Julieta Lemaitre
Toward a Self-Reflexive Law? Narrating Torture’s Legality in Human Rights Litigation Natalie R. Davidson
On the Magic of Law Laurent de Sutter
‘Life Grasps Life’: Wilhelm Dilthey’s Minor Jurisprudence Panu Minkkinen
Conditions of Carriage: Finding a Place Shaun McVeigh
Law As…Forest: Eco-logic, Stories and Spirits in Indigenous Jurisprudence Kirsten Anker
Legal Footprints / Legal Footprints in Redfern: A photoessay of Carol Ruff’s ‘40,000 Years’ Mural in Lawson Street, Redfern, Sydney, Australia Olivia Barr
A Minor Jurisprudence of Spectacular War: Law As Eye in the Sky Jothie Rajah
Law as Minor Jurisprudence: Is it a Mistake? Genevieve Renard Painter
Read on
here.