Law & Society
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Description
Published as Chapter 39 in The Oxford Handbook of Law and Politics, Keith E. Whittington, R. Daniel Keleman & George A. Caldera, eds.
The study of law and society rests on the belief that legal rules and decisions must be understood in context. Law is not autonomous, standing outside of the social world, but is deeply embedded within society. While political scientists recognize the fundamentally political nature of law, the law and society perspective takes this assumption several steps further by pointing to ways in which law is socially and historically constructed, how law both reflects and impacts culture, and how inequalities are reinforced through differential access to, and competence with, legal procedures and institutions. This article discusses the key characteristics of a law and society perspective, some of the major research contributions of this field, and recent developments in law and society that hold particular promise for scholars of law and politics today. In particular, it examines three broad areas of law and society scholarship: disputing, decision making, and legal ideology and consciousness.
Publication Date
1-1-2008
Publisher
Oxford University Press
City
New York
ISBN
978-0-19-920842-5
First Page
681
Last Page
697
Keywords
law, society, politics, disputing, decision making, legal ideology
Disciplines
Law | Law and Society
Recommended Citation
Lynn M. Mather, Law & Society in The Oxford Handbook of Law and Politics (Keith E. Whittington, R. Daniel Keleman & George A. Caldeira, eds., Oxford University Press 2008).
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