Law After Modernity (legal Theory Today)
by Sionaidh Douglas-Scott /
2013 / English / PDF
6.3 MB Download
How can we characterize law and legal theory in the 21st century?
This book argues that we live in an age 'after modernity' and that
legal theory must take account of this fact. The book attacks, as
outdated, theories of law which rest on widespread notions of law's
autonomy and systematic nature and on certain notions of justice,
personhood, and legitimacy, and seeks to replace them with a
dynamic new account of law and laws appropriate for an era of
globalization and postnational communities. However, it also argues
that the most pressing issue for law after modernity is that of
justice. The approach is fresh, contextual, and interdisciplinary,
as well as unusual for a work of legal theory due to being
illustrated throughout with works of art and visual representations
which serve to enforce the messages of the book. (Series: Legal
Theory Today)
How can we characterize law and legal theory in the 21st century?
This book argues that we live in an age 'after modernity' and that
legal theory must take account of this fact. The book attacks, as
outdated, theories of law which rest on widespread notions of law's
autonomy and systematic nature and on certain notions of justice,
personhood, and legitimacy, and seeks to replace them with a
dynamic new account of law and laws appropriate for an era of
globalization and postnational communities. However, it also argues
that the most pressing issue for law after modernity is that of
justice. The approach is fresh, contextual, and interdisciplinary,
as well as unusual for a work of legal theory due to being
illustrated throughout with works of art and visual representations
which serve to enforce the messages of the book. (Series: Legal
Theory Today)