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Handbook on Space, Place and Law

Edited by: Robyn Bartel, Jennifer Carter

ISBN13: 9781035308101
Published: October 2022
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Paperback (Hardback in 2021)
Price: £42.00
Hardback edition , ISBN13 9781788977197



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This innovative Handbook provides an expansive interrogation of the spaces and places of law, exploring how we engage relationally in a material world, within which we are inter-dependent and reliant, and governed by laws in a dynamic process. It advances novel insights into the numerous intersections of space, place and law in our lives.

International contributors offer a range of activity-orientated analyses, focusing on methodology, embodied experience, legal pluralism, conflict and resistance, and non-human and place agency. The Handbook examines a number of cross-cutting themes including social inequality, environmental justice, sustainability, urban development, indigenous legal systems, the effects of colonialism and property law. Representing a diversity of locales from all around the world, the chapters encompass both urban and rural, terrestrial and marine areas, agential and storied spaces, and fictional as well as ‘real’ places.

Taking a multi-disciplinary approach that incorporates law, human and legal geography, planning, sociology, political ecology, anthropology, and beyond, this comprehensive Handbook will be critical reading for scholars and students of these and cognate areas. Its discussion of empirical examples will also be beneficial for practitioners and policymakers interested in these fields.

Subjects:
Law and Society
Contents:
Foreword: What is legal geography? Why, and why now?
Nicholas Blomley
Introduction to space, place and law
Robyn Bartel and Jennifer Carter
PART I. WAY FINDING
1. How to make 1500 holes in the ground: accounting for law alongside other place-shaping factors in the making of an exceptional Cold War network
Luke Bennett
2. Legislative tenure and spatial economic analysis: an illustrative example of papaya production in Nadroga province, Fiji
Chethna Ben
3. In the eyes of the law: stalking and the legal (mis)construal of scopic relational spaces
David Delaney and Päivi Rannila
4. All the land was stolen: investigating the aporia of justice through countertopographies of Indigenous land rights and settler colonialism across the Americas
Joel E. Correia
PART II. JOURNEYING
5. Neighbourhoods for an ageing population in Singapore
Belinda Yuen
6. Sexual offences and to have done with the courtroom
Victoria Brooks
7. Performing law: space and the unfolding of gender and violence in India
Kalindi Kokal and Werner Menski
8. Place: sacrifice and property law in extra-territorial nation spaces
Lee Godden
PART III. BORDER CROSSINGS
9. Understanding the impact of customary land tenure and reform in Papua New Guinea
Flora Kwapena
10. The spatial management of sex work: placing marginality through formal and informal practices
Caitlin Neuwelt-Kearns, Tom Baker and Octavia Calder-Dawe
11. Collision between two ‘public interests’ in housing demolition and relocation in Dalian, China
Chen Li, Min Jiang and Mark Yaolin Wang
12. Law, place and maps
Antonia Layard
PART IV. DIFFERENT DIRECTIONS
13. Activating rural spaces in the pursuit of unconventional energy and justice
Meg Sherval
14. Land territorialisation, contestation and informal place-laws of Indigenous peoples in Phuket and Phang Nga, Thailand
Daniel Robinson, Danielle Drozdzewski and Jaruwan Kaewmahanin Enright
15. Indigenous land conflict and the underlying life of laws: lessons from the Ipperwash Crisis
Nicole Latulippe
16. Extracting Indigenous jurisdiction on private land: the duty to consult and Indigenous relations with place in Canadian law
Estair Van Wagner
PART V. INTERSECTIONS
17. Paying attention to the spaces in between: the social production of space and Indigenous presence in cities
Melissa Nursey-Bray and Stephen Muecke
18. Negotiating privacy in the ‘vertical city’: regulating the gentrification of the skies
Phil Hubbard
19. Landscapes of colonial Australian entanglement: authorities, self-definition and cultural pedagogy
John Ryan and Baden Offord
20. Reclaiming land, reclaiming the ‘nomos’: towards a geography of emerging rights
Benno Fladvad, Silja Klepp and Florian Dünckmann
PART VI. FELLOW TRAVELLERS
21. Pets, pests and humane humans
Jennifer Carter and Mandy Paterson
22. Apples and oranges? Exchanging offsets for a place agency-based approach
Wendy Beck and Robyn Bartel
23. A case for ‘place’ in governing the energy–environment nexus
Amanda Kennedy and Cameron Holley
24. Dephysicalised property and shadow lands
Nicole Graham
PART VII. NEW HORIZONS
25. Territorializing Arrakis: competing for water and melange at the edge of the galactic empire – between desert gatherers and the spacefaring
Allan Charles Dawson and Ismael Vaccaro
26. Law underground: the legal geographies of gas transmission pipeline risk regulation
Brad Jessup
27. Place, space, and cyberlaw
Barney Warf
28. Freedom and constraint in sailing: exploring a gendered attachment to sea-places
Shelley A. Wright
PART VIII. WAYS FORWARD
29. Tackling corruption in urban development and planning: from compliance to integrity in Africa and beyond
Dieter Zinnbauer and Stephen Berrisford
30. Land, people and places: double visions and corporate land ownership
Radha D’Souza
31. Making there like here: is the impossible possible
Robyn Bartel and Christopher Stone
32. Where to from here? From law to place and back again
Robyn Bartel and Jennifer Carter

Index