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100 _aOrzeck, Reecia
_958626
245 _aRestructuring legal geography/
260 _bSage,
_c2020.
300 _aVol. 44, issue 5, 2020 ( 832–851 p.).
520 _aWe argue that legal geography’s ability to produce holistic knowledge about law and legal relations is hampered by the qualified dominance in the field of what we refer to as a contingency orientation. This phrase refers to both the belief that law, legal relations, and legal outcomes are more open and contingent than they appear to be, and to an empirical interest in bringing to light moments when law, legal relations, and legal outcomes appear to depart from dominant representations of these as closed, determinate, aspatial, and wholly formal. Because holistic accounts of the social world require attention to both agency and structure, both contingency and determination, we call for a stream of scholarship within legal geography the purpose of which is to give more explicit and concerted attention to structure and determination than there has heretofore been in the field, and to produce research-based theoretical knowledge that can thus improve the holism of our collective understanding of the law.
700 _aHae, Laam
_958627
773 0 _012579
_917141
_dLondon: Sage Publication Ltd, 2019.
_tProgress in human geography/
_x 03091325
856 _uhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0309132519848637
942 _2ddc
_cEJR
999 _c14961
_d14961