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  1. Dec 30, 2021 · Here we speak of rules that are directives of behavior by humans, backed by enforcement of other humans. Yet, law and culture differ in fundamental details, including: (a) the identity of those who initiate the rules; (b) the rules’ underlying purposes and values; (c) how these rules are (i) initiated, (ii) developed, (iii) expressed, (iv ...

  2. Law, Culture, and Ritual. by Oscar Chase—provide a welcome response to this “anti-culture” bias. Both works point to the enduring claims of culture as the necessary and inevitable mechanism by which human beings construct meaning out of reality. Indeed, the capacity for culture is seen as a crucial part of our very evolution as a species. 5

    • Paul Schiff Berman
    • 2009
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  4. Dec 6, 2014 · The term ‘social inclusion’ has changed since its inception under Rene Lenoir in the early 1970s. As a definition in law in 1975 to help disabled people it has become a broad spectrum policy organizing and action concept that encompasses all forms of social exclusion and marginalization with a strong poverty-reduction and youth employment ...

    • Michael A. Peters, Tina A.C. Besley
    • 2014
    • Michel Foucault’s Approach to Socio-Legal Change: The Epistemic Dimension of Law
    • Pierre Bourdieu’s Sociology of The Juridical Field
    • Niklas Luhmann’s System Theory of Law

    Michel Foucault was an inquisitive and highly critical student of power. His novel analytical strategy involved examining the margins of the society in order to identify the forces which hold it together, including the image of the world and the kind of knowledge on which they operate, and the practices which they produce, including those which the...

    It could be said that while Foucault studied legal epistemologies, Pierre Bourdieu put the structures produced by these epistemologies in the center of his sociology of law. It is, in many ways, a unique area of study in Bourdieusian legacy, as it is empirically underdeveloped compared to Bourdieu’s sociology of education (Bourdieu and Passeron 199...

    Niklas Luhmann’s sociology of law is in many ways a unique enterprise. It belongs to the paradigm of system theories, which have been accused of being intrinsically ahistorical. However, Luhmann’s sociological project, of which sociology of law (Luhmann 2013) is a major part next to general social theory (1995), sociology of religion (1977), politi...

    • bucholcm@is.uw.edu.pl
  5. Nov 2, 2019 · Three main schools of thought or traditions in jurisprudence can be discerned: (a) conceptual or analytical reasoning about law; (b) normative or value-based reasoning about law; and (c) historical, sociological or contextual analysis about law.

    • George Mousourakis
    • 2019
  6. May 31, 2023 · Legal culture is an analytical tool to put jus strictum in a legal context. This is an act of making law thicker, that is, of giving law a context. It is hence different from legal appliance, which is all about making law as slim as possible, that is, about taking law out of context to focus only on the legally relevant.

  7. Oct 26, 2017 · Much of the cultural sociological research in law and culture falls into one of the following approaches: (1) law as a structure that enables and constrains culture; (2) culture as a structure ...