Toward a new legal common sense : law, globalization, and emancipation

Bibliographic Information

Toward a new legal common sense : law, globalization, and emancipation

Boaventura de Sousa Santos

(Law in context)

Cambridge University Press, 2020

3rd ed

  • : pbk

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

Previous ed. published by Butterworths LexisNexis, 2002

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Paradigmatic transition is the idea that ours is a time of transition between the paradigm of modernity, which seems to have exhausted its regenerating capacities, and another, emergent time, of which so far we have seen only signs. Modernity as an ambitious and revolutionary sociocultural paradigm based on a dynamic tension between social regulation and social emancipation, the prevalent dynamic in the sixteenth century, has by the twenty-first century tilted in favour of regulation, to the determent of emancipation. The collapse of emancipation into regulation, and hence the impossibility of thinking about social emancipation consistently, symbolizes the exhaustion of the paradigm of modernity. At the same time, it signals the emergence of a new paradigm or new paradigms. This updated 2020 edition is written for students taking law and globalization courses, and political science, philosophy and sociology students doing optional subjects.

Table of Contents

  • Preface to the Third Edition
  • Preface to the Second Edition
  • 1.The Tension between Regulation and Emancipation in Western Modernity and Its Demise
  • 2. Toward an Oppositional Postmodern Understanding of Law
  • 3. Legal Plurality and the Time-Spaces of Law: The Local, the National, and the Global
  • 4. The Law of the Oppressed: The Construction and Reproduction of Legality in Pasargada
  • 5. Globalization, Nation-States, and the Legal Field: From Legal Diaspora to Legal Ecumenism?
  • 6. Law and Democracy: The Global Reform of Courts
  • 7. On Modes of Production of Social Law and Social Power
  • 8. Law: A Map of Misreading
  • 9. Can Law Be Emancipatory?
  • Postface as Disquietude.

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